Showing posts with label UN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label UN. Show all posts

Monday, February 29, 2016

News in Japan - February

USA:
History Doesn’t Repeat Itself—Not Here, Anyway (USA). After discussions and deliberation between cities, states, and the federal government, many of these flood-damaged and flood-prone lands were converted into open space through government acquisitions, or “buyouts.” After 1993, parks and fields were created where homes had once stood. These areas were now easier to maintain and protect. Children could play football or soccer. Families could picnic in the summertime and build snowmen in the winter.
Record Missouri flooding was manmade calamity, scientist says Most news reports blamed it on the heavy rain, but a professor of earth and planetary sciences says analysis of the flood data shows much of the damage was due to recent modifications to the river. The flood on the middle Mississippi River, in turn, was remarkable for its short duration and the time of year. "It was essentially a winter flash flood on a continental-scale river," Criss said. "The Mississippi has been so channelized and leveed close to St. Louis that it now responds like a much smaller river." "In the meantime," he said, "inaccurate Federal Emergency Management Agency flood frequencies based on the assumption that today's river will behave as it has in the past greatly underestimate our real flood risk and lead to inappropriate development in floodways and floodplains." "The heavy rainfall was probably related to El Niño, and possibly intensified by global warming. But new records were set only in areas that have undergone intense development, which is known to magnify floods and shorten their timescales. "People want to blame the rain, but this is mostly us," Criss said. "It's a manmade disaster." During the New Year's flood, roughly 7,000 buildings near St. Louis were damaged, two interstate highways were closed for several days, the community of Valley Park was evacuated, and two Metropolitan Sewer District plants were swamped so that sewage was dumped directly into the water. The flood killed more than 20 people in Missouri and Illinois, caused several hundred million dollars of damage, and left millions of tons of debris in its wake.
The best way to protect us from climate change? Save our ecosystems There is now clear evidence that intact forests have a positive influence on both planetary climate and local weather regimes. Forests also provide shelter from extreme weather events, and are home to a host of other valuable ecosystems that are important to human populations as sources of food, medicine and timber. In Vietnam, 12,000 hectares of mangroves have been planted at a cost of US$1.1 million, but saving the US$7.3 million per year that would have been spent on maintaining dykes. In Louisiana, the destruction of Hurricane Katrina in 2005 led to an examination of how coastal salt marshes might have reduced some of the wave energy in the hurricane-associated storm surges. Data have now confirmed that salt marshes would have significantly reduced the impact of those surges, and stabilised the shoreline against further insult, at far less cost than engineered coastal defences. With this data in hand, discussions are now beginning around how to restore the Louisiana salt marshes to insulate against future extreme weather events.
Flavour of Dutch dialogues gets into 1 billion dollar US disaster resilience plans Morris has been closely involved in the competition and emphasises the tremendous Dutch influence in these projects. In particular, he mentions the climate adaptive approach that focusses on disaster prevention, and on the involvement of many stakeholders right from the start. "This is a distinct Dutch approach to urban planning", says Morris. "Also the involvement of landscape architecture shows the Dutch influence in these projects". "With the two competitions the housing department provokes the states and the local communities to think about their future and the social-economic development. The US is well organized on reactive disaster response. The competitions made them think of the future and long term planning for smart investments." 

Netherlands:

Vulnerable People:

Other:
With a 21 percent share of the national gross domestic product (GDP) and a 45 percent share of Pakistan's total workforce, it is crucial that agriculture be able to prevent and mitigate the impact of disasters.
Human-made climate change helped cause south of England floods, say scientists anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions increased the risk of the once-a-century wet January in 2014 by 43% (uncertainty range: 0-160%). The heightened risk of rainfall found in the meteorological modelling led to an increase in the peak 30-day river flow of 21% (uncertainty range: -17-133%) and about 1,000 more properties at risk of flooding (uncertainty range: -4,000-8,000).
Borrowed Time on Disappearing Land (Bangladesh) “These migrants should have the right to move to the countries from which all these greenhouse gases are coming. Millions should be able to go to the United States.” Making matters worse, much of what the Bangladeshi government is doing to stave off the coming deluge — raising levees, dredging canals, pumping water — deepens the threat of inundation in the long term. In an analysis of decades of tidal records published in October, Dr. Pethick found that high tides in Bangladesh were rising 10 times faster than the global average. He predicted that seas in Bangladesh could rise as much as 13 feet by 2100, four times the global average. “The reaction among Bangladeshi government officials has been to tell me that I must be wrong,” he said. “That’s completely understandable, but it also means they have no hope of preparing themselves.” “There is no doubt that preparations within Bangladesh have been utterly inadequate, but any such preparations are bound to fail because the problem is far too big for any single government,” said Tariq A. Karim, Bangladesh’s ambassador to India. “We need a regional and, better yet, a global solution. The family reunited on the road the next day after the children spent a harrowing night avoiding snakes that had sought higher ground, too. They drank rainwater until rescuers arrived a day or two later with bottled water, food and other supplies. In the weeks after the storm, the women of Dakope found firewood by wading into the raging river and pushing their toes into the muddy bottom. They walked hours to buy drinking water. “I don’t want to stay here (slums) for too long,” Mr. Gazi said. “If we can save some money, then we’ll go back. I’ll work on a piece of land and try to make it fertile again.” But the chances of finding fertile land in his home village, where the salty rivers have eaten away acre upon acre, are almost zero.

Monday, February 1, 2016

UNESCO ENHANS project - IFAS now mentioned on UN-SPIDER website

Thanks to the collaborative efforts with Juan Carlos Villagrán de León, Head of UN-SPIDER Bonn Office, ICHARM's Integrated Flood Analysis System is now featured on the UN-SPIDER website.

The United Nations Platform for Space-based information for Disaster Management and Emergency Response (UN-SPIDER) was established by the United Nations in December 2006 and has as goal to 'ensure that all countries and international and regional organizations have access to and develop the capacity to use all types of space-based information to support the full disaster management cycle'.

You can find much more free downloadable software in their database.



 

Friday, January 29, 2016

UNISDR Science and Technology Conference on the Implementation of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030

On Thursday, ICHARM's PhD student Md. Nasif Ahsan presented a poster at the UNISDR Science and Technology Conference on the Implementation of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030 in Geneva, Switzerland. 

The poster was titled "The challenges and opportunities of early warning messages aimed at evacuation compliance: A case report following Cyclone Aila in Bangladesh" and was presented in work stream 2, Understanding disaster risk, risk assessment and early warning. The results are partially based on our previously published paper, 'Factors affecting the evacuation decisions of coastal households during Cyclone Aila in Bangladesh'. I am proud to have collaborated on this poster and very happy about all the constructive discussions that followed Nasif's presentation. 

Thursday, December 17, 2015

UNESCO ENHANS project meeting

ENHANCING NATURAL HAZARDS RESILIENCE IN SOUTH AMERICA

At this meeting Masahiko Murase from ICHARM explained the research and education activities at ICHARM, and Karina Vink showed three models used for different project: BTOP, IFAS and RRI. 

A program specialist of UNESCO requested more technical requirements of an IFAS training for the four target countries of the ENHANS project. The ENHANS project currently has as target countries: Ecuador, Chili, Peru, Uruguay. The first target for IFAS training would be Chili/Peru, possibly simultaneously as the target areas in these countries border each other (North Chili, South Peru). As training period May was suggested. 

The ENHANS meeting in Montevideo was successful as multiple parties expressed an interest in IFAS training and ICHARM models. As a next step a governmental request for IFAS training would aid in arranging the necessary required administrative steps and financing surrounding the organization of IFAS trainings abroad. ICHARM will continue to support and prepare for IFAS training in the ENHANS target countries if so requested.

Friday, October 30, 2015

News in Japan - October

GEJET:
TEPCO rejected requests for anti-tsunami steps before nuclear crisis
First cancer case confirmed from Fukushima cleanup

Japan:
Behind the Scenes / Concern for privacy of Joso missing excessive
Volunteers mucking in to help Japan clean-up

USA:
Hurricane Patricia Recap: Strongest Landfalling Pacific Hurricane on Record
Flood risk on rise for New York City, New Jersey coast, study finds
One-two punch of rising seas, bigger storms may greatly magnify US East coast floods

Netherlands:
Pop-up Exhibition in Dordrecht on potential flood disasters

Other:
In dryland African regions, limiting wildlife water access can reduce water quality
NASA studying 2015 El Nino event as never before
Want To Know How Sea Level Rise Will Impact Your Hometown? There’s A Map For That
Surging seas mapping progress
Researchers work on model to help restoration managers with decision-making (USA, Germany)
Why some scientists are worried about a surprisingly cold ‘blob’ in the North Atlantic Ocean
Work starts on Sendai indicators

Vulnerable People:
Japan’s child poverty above OECD average
Shibuya Ward to begin accepting applications for 'same-sex partnership certificates'

Japanese flood and landslides:
Here are the latest statistics from the Japanese government's Fire and Disaster Management Agency and other national and local governments as of Friday, Sept. 18:
•        The death toll is eight: three in Tochigi Prefecture, three in Ibaraki Prefecture, and two in Miyagi Prefecture.
•        There are 46 confirmed injuries, with Ibaraki Prefecture accounting for 24 of them.
•        A total of 18,882 dwellings have been confirmed flooded. Ibaraki leads this list as well, with 12,088 flooded homes.
•        In addition to the flooded homes, 16 dwellings have been destroyed and another 102 have structural damage.
•        Damage also occurred to 61 non-residential structures.
•        Damage to the agricultural, forestry and fishing industries has reached 11.7 billion yen (about 98 million U.S. dollars).
•        At least 455 landslides were reported – 358 of them in Tochigi Prefecture alone, and 312 of those in the city of Nikkō, according to the prefectural government.
•        Up to 26 inches of rain fell in eastern Japan Sunday through Friday due to Tropical Storm Etau and its remnant low.
•        Local officials in Ibaraki Prefecture said 1,344 people had been rescued via helicopter by the country's Self-Defence Force and rescuers from 10 of the country's 47 prefectures.
Key developments in the storm:
•        On Wednesday, Sept. 16, officials confimed the death of a 40-year-old man who had been out on his bicycle when the floods hit Ibaraki Prefecture on Sept. 10.
•        A 60-year-old man was found dead Saturday after the vehicle he was in was swept into a flooded river Friday morning in the city of Kurihara, Miyagi Prefecture. A 48-year-old woman also died in that incident.
•        Japanese media said a pair of eight-year-old boys were among those found alive and removed from the list of missing Saturday.
•        Two men, ages 71 and 51, were found dead in rice fields flooded by the levee breach in Joso, according to public broadcaster NHK. The men were not previously among the list of missing.
•        The Japanese government's Fire and Disaster Management Agency confirmed that a man found dead in a flooded vehicle in Tochigi Prefecture Sunday morning died of storm-related causes.
•        A 63-year-old woman was confirmed dead after a landslide struck Kanuma city, Tochigi Prefecture, early Thursday. The woman was missing for hours before being found dead Thursday evening.
•        A man in his 20s was confirmed dead Friday after falling into a flooded drainage pipe Thursday in Nikkō city, Tochigi Prefecture.
•        Rare emergency weather warnings were issued for Tochigi, Ibaraki and Miyagi prefectures on Thursday and Friday, but have all since been lowered.
•        A magnitude-5.2 earthquake struck Tokyo Bay at 5:49 a.m. local time Saturday, rattling the entire Tokyo region and prompting fears of quake-triggered landslides in rain-soaked hilly terrain.
•        The earthquake injured seven people in Tokyo and its suburbs, according to the FDMA.
•        Another earthquake, rated magnitude 4.6 and centered off the east coast of Ibaraki Prefecture, rattled the Joso flood zone nearly six hours later but with weaker ground shaking.
•        The Shibui River broke through a levee in Ōsaki city, Miyagi Prefecture, on Friday morning. At least 1,000 people were stranded in floodwaters, according to the newspaper Asahi Shimbun.
•        The Japan Meteorological Agency issued the maximum "Level 5" flood warning Friday for the Yoshida River in Miyagi Prefecture and for the Mogamiogumi River in Yamagata Prefecture.
•        More than 800 people in the mountainous town of Minamiaizu, Fukushima Prefecture, were cut off from the outside world due to flooding and landslides on the lone highway through town Friday.
The Japan Meteorological Agency issued a rare emergency heavy rainfall warning for Miyagi Prefecture and its 2.3 million residents early Friday as torrential rains continued to drench the prefecture, which includes the city of Sendai, raising concerns of landslides and river flooding. The JMA observation site near Sendai's central business district reported 269 millimeters (10.59 inches) of rain in the 24-hour period between 7:40 a.m. Thursday and 7:40 a.m. Friday local time. (Japan is 13 hours ahead of U.S. Eastern Daylight Time.) JMA lowered the warning for Miyagi Friday evening.
"We can say this is an abnormal situation and there is imminent serious danger," said Takuya Deshimaru, chief forecaster at the Japan Meteorological Agency, according to the BBC.
On Thursday, JMA issued similar emergency weather warnings for 5 million people in Tochigi Prefecture and Ibaraki Prefecture, north and northeast of Tokyo, on Thursday morning. The warnings were issued as a band of heavy rainfall associated with the post-tropical remnant of Tropical Storm Etau stalled over eastern Japan, dumping up to 21 inches of rain in 24 hours near the head of the Kunigawa River, which drains south through the northern suburbs of Tokyo.
The emergency warnings in Tochigi and Ibaraki prefectures were lowered Friday morning.

Friday, July 31, 2015

News in Japan - July

GEJET:
Gov't to lift evacuation order on Fukushima town on Sept 5  Naraha's 7,400 citizens will be the first evacuees to be able to return home permanently among seven municipalities where the entire population was ordered to leave. However, evacuees have mixed feelings about going back to their hometown due to concerns over radiation and lack of medical care, and it was not clear how many of them would return. "There are no shops. There are no doctors. I don't know what to do," a woman told local media on Tuesday. In April, the government started to allow Naraha evacuees to return home for three-month stays to prepare for permanent return.

Japan:
Mount Fuji climbers urged to protect themselves against volcanic eruption The Yamanashi prefectural government placed 1,500 sets of helmets, goggles and dust-proof masks on the fifth station of the Fuji Subaruline toll road. The Fujiyoshida city government also prepared 1,000 of the sets in mountain lodges.

USA:
Major midwest flood risk underestimated by as much as five feet, study finds  As floodwaters surge along major rivers in the midwestern United States, a new study from Washington University in St. Louis suggests federal agencies are underestimating historic 100-year flood levels on these rivers by as much as five feet, a miscalculation that has serious implications for future flood risks, flood insurance and business development in an expanding floodplain.
Researchers find reasons behind increases in urban flooding (USA)
The Really Big One When the next full-margin rupture happens, that region will suffer the worst natural disaster in the history of North America.FEMAprojects that nearly thirteen thousand people will die in the Cascadia earthquake and tsunami. Another twenty-seven thousand will be injured, and the agency expects that it will need to provide shelter for a million displaced people, and food and water for another two and a half million. We now know that the odds of the big Cascadia earthquake happening in the next fifty years are roughly one in three. The odds of the very big one are roughly one in ten.
In Oregon, it has been illegal since 1995 to build hospitals, schools, firehouses, and police stations in the inundation zone, but those which are already in it can stay, and any other new construction is permissible: energy facilities, hotels, retirement homes. In those cases, builders are required only to consult withDOGAMIabout evacuation plans. “So you come in and sit down,” Ian Madin says. “And I say, ‘That’s a stupid idea.’ And you say, ‘Thanks. Now we’ve consulted.’ ”
Twenty-two per cent of Oregon’s coastal population is sixty-five or older. Twenty-nine per cent of the state’s population is disabled, and that figure rises in many coastal counties. “We can’t save them,” Kevin Cupples says. “I’m not going to sugarcoat it and say, ‘Oh, yeah, we’ll go around and check on the elderly.’ No. We won’t.” Nor will anyone save the tourists. Washington State Park properties within the inundation zone see an average of seventeen thousand and twenty-nine guests a day. Madin estimates that up to a hundred and fifty thousand people visit Oregon’s beaches on summer weekends. “Most of them won’t have a clue as to how to evacuate,” he says. “And the beaches are the hardest place to evacuate from.”
Whoever chooses or has no choice but to stay there will spend three to six months without electricity, one to three years without drinking water and sewage systems, and three or more years without hospitals. Those estimates do not apply to the tsunami-inundation zone, which will remain all but uninhabitable for years.

Netherlands:
Dutch F-16 inspects river levees for sand boilsIt was not the first time for a Dutch regional water board to call in an reconnaissance F-16. In 2011 and 2012 F-16s took infra-red images of levees too, but that were all emergency situations when levees were about to fail.

Other:
Research will help inform pre-flood planning (UK)
GNDR SWOT analysis of Sendai Framework for DRR
Climate change reduces coral reefs' ability to protect coasts
Predicting the shape of river deltas

Vulnerable people:
LGBT People Ask for Lawyers' Support for Same-Sex Marriage in Japan A total of 455 lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people petitioned the Japan Federation of Bar Associations on Tuesday to urge the government and lawmakers to legalize same-sex marriage. The LGBT people, including two living abroad and 142 same-sex couples, argue that it is unconstitutional and an abuse of human rights that same-sex marriages are not legally recognized in Japan.

Friday, June 26, 2015

News in Japan - June

Japan:
Ocean Cleanup announces world's first floatable ocean cleanup installation near Tsushima island, Japan Every year 30,000 cubic meters of trash is deposited on its shores. The collection of this garbage costs about 5 million USD annually. Tsushima island is evaluating whether the plastic can be used as an alternative energy source.
Below 96 percent of Japan elementary, junior high schools quake-resistant
Heavy rain hits Japan's Kyushu; 370,000 advised to evacuate
PREPARING FOR THE BIG ONE: THE JAPANESE EARTHQUAKE MINDSET

USA:
Severe flooding hits central Texas, Oklahoma TRMM/GPM are a joint missions between NASA and the Japanese space agency JAXA.
New tools aiding storm prediction, increasing ship navigational safety in Gulf of Mexico

Netherlands:
Ambitious 850 million reinforcement will make the Afsluitdijk a new icon of Dutch flood protection
Floods as war weapons A new study shows that, from 1500 until 2000, about a third of floods in southwestern Netherlands were deliberately caused by humans during wartimes. Some of these inundations resulted in significant changes to the landscape, being as damaging as floods caused by heavy rainfall or storm surges.
75% of Dutch people cannot reanimate (Dutch) 60% cannot locate nearest AED. Every week 300 Dutch people have a cardiac arrest outside of the hospital, having an average age of 66 years.

Other:
Flash flood risks increase as storm peak downpours intensify (Australia) "It means that most people in Australia can expect to see intensification in the magnitude of flash flooding in smaller catchments, particularly in urban or residential areas" The increase in flood peaks are estimated to be about 19% for Hobart, 12% for Sydney, 10% for Perth, and 45% in Darwin
Researchers to help create 'early-warning systems' through social media to combat future disasters (global)
Global risks: Pool knowledge to stem losses from disasters by Cutter, Takeuchi et al

Sediment makes it harder for baby Nemo to breathe easy Researchers have discovered that suspended sediment damages fish gills and can increase the rate of disease in fish.
Victim and major damage by severe weather in Germany (Dutch) - Dode en veel schade Duitsland door noodweer A 49 year old male died when hit by a falling tree branch. Six people were injured by a lightning strike.

Vulnerable people:
The sedentary office: a growing case for change towards better health and productivity. Expert statement commissioned by Public Health England and the Active Working Community Interest Company for those occupations which are predominantly desk based, workers should aim to initially progress towards accumulating 2 h/day of standing and light activity (light walking) during working hours, eventually progressing to a total accumulation of 4 h/day (prorated to part-time hours).
Foreign same-sex couples here enjoy rights that Japanese don't

Critique on the Sendai Framework process:
Expertise and policy-making in disaster risk reduction “Despite their presence, NGOs, civil society groups, and scientific experts were not allowed to participate in the formal negotiations. Diplomats would have benefited of the expertise from the scientific community and civil society groups as the delegates showed a very limited understanding of disaster risk reduction (DRR) and the broader concept of  resilience during the negotiation.“ “Many delegates seemed most interested in promoting their national interests, suppressing wording that cemented commitments, rather than discussing the substance of the proposed framework.” “In general, much of the research done by the scientific community and NGOs — research that was centralized in the Global Assessment of Disaster Reduction 2015 (GAR), and presented at the conference specifically to inform decision-makers — was widely neglected in the final agreement. As a result, the Sendai Framework lacks scientific substance, contains many loosely conceptualized targets, and poorly represents the amount of research presented during the conference.”
“These formal negotiations were closed to both the public and conference participants, and probably reduced the pressure on diplomats to integrate the suggestions from the immediately available expertise. While exclusion of these actors in the formal process may make formal agreements easier to reach, the result is a framework that lacks ambition, especially considering that it is not legally binding.”
”First, there must be direct participation of the scientific community in the negotiations”
“Second, there is a need to make the GAR more central to the negotiations, in a similar manner to the IPCC, to make it harder for decision-makers to ignore it.”
“Third, more opportunities for communication and mutual learning should have been provided at the conference.“
Colin Walch is in the Department of Peace and Conflict Research and Centre for Natural Disaster Science (CNDS) in Sweden.

Thursday, April 30, 2015

News in Japan - April


USA:
RisingSea Levels Are Already Making Miami’s Floods Worse "We’re already pretty well committed to significant sea level rise. We would be more prudent to consider how to adapt to those conditions.”
Wetlands needed to reduce flooding disasters The economic benefit from converting cropland in the floodplain to wetland flood storage would be $500 million per year.
Netherlands:
Largeelectrical power failure in the Netherlands  (Dutch) 1 million households, Schiphol airport, train stations and hospitals among affected
Largepart of North-Holland without electricity (Dutch) 20:05: Websites and apps of the public broadcasting channels are coming online again one by one – these are the disaster broadcasting channels (De websites en apps van de publieke omroep komen stapsgewijs weer in de lucht. Dat meldt de NPO. De livestreams en Uitzending Gemist werken weer).

Other:
Mastersof the Universe Disaster databases are important, but on their own they are not driving the change. Our colleague Adessou had been in a session on this theme and had spoken to say we need to get personal, look at peoples' lives and livelihoods and the everyday disasters which evidence shows are felt by people to have the greatest impact on their lives.

Vulnerable people:
Sendai Update: Will the World’s New Disaster RiskReduction Deal Be an Empty Promise? “incomplete, incoherent, and irresponsible.” “wealthy countries are refusing to commit more money for disaster risk reduction. Never mind that climate change, for which those same wealthy countries bear the greater historical responsibility, is partly to blame for the increasing damage that poor people in poor countries are suffering because of disasters.”
I found that many sessions on the financial aspects of DRR were held, and it is agreed that all DRR plans must have a financial and maintenance aspect for them to be implemented and sustainable. However, the Sendai framework itself does not have any financial commitments.

Friday, April 17, 2015

7th WWF day 6

7th World Water Forum in Daegu and Gyeongju, Korea - day 6

In the morning at 9:00 ICHARM organized the closing session of the Theme Water and Disasters. We had over 60 people turn up to the session, which launched the Implementation Roadmap with actions to be taken on this theme between now and the next WWF in Brazil, 2018. After our session, we checked up on the exhibition booth and placed the final documents online, which you can find here under 'documents'. The final closing ceremony was a massive event with over 700 people and many prizes awarded. 

Thursday, April 16, 2015

7th WWF day 5

7th World Water Forum in Daegu and Gyeongju, Korea - day 5

We spent most of the morning meeting coordinating our concluding session on the last day of the forum. We still had to finalize the schedule, create handouts for the audience, and place as much materials online as possible. Luckily there was a little time left over to catch up with people from the Xiamen international water law department from China, before attending two sessions and being whisked away to a dinner with the typhoon committee. 

   

Wednesday, April 15, 2015

7th WWF day 4

7th World Water Forum in Daegu and Gyeongju, Korea - day 4

There was time to visit three sessions today in Daegu, on the topics of water justice, governance indicators, and monitoring risks.

Tuesday, April 14, 2015

7th WWF day 3

7th World Water Forum in Daegu and Gyeongju, Korea - day 3

After visiting a session at the EXCO, today was the one day I was able to visit the political process in Gyeongju, some 100 km East of Daegu. The WWF had organized hourly buses between these towns, and as we missed a returning connection to Daegu we had the opportunity to visit the HICO venue in Gyeongju.

Monday, April 13, 2015

7th WWF day 2

7th World Water Forum in Daegu and Gyeongju, Korea - day 2

I visited four events today, starting with the opening ceremony of the thematic sessions, followed by two thematic sessions on the human right of water and water policies, and finally a scientific session on climate change impact and vulnerability.

Sunday, April 12, 2015

7th WWF day 1

7th World Water Forum in Daegu and Gyeongju, Korea - day 1

Today was the first day of the world water forum. We joined the opening ceremony on Daegu, at the exhibition center called EXCO. As it was quite crowded, there was a special room for VIP members to view the ceremony live, and another room for additional visitors to watch it on screens. In total, the secretariat reports there were over 3,000 people attending the opening ceremony. Security was heavy as President Park of Korea and many other heads of state were present in the building. As in Japan, Korea likes the use of mascots and we were treated abundantly with examples of traditional clothing, dances, sports, and many other cultural aspects.

Tuesday, March 17, 2015

WCDRR day 4

World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction in Sendai - day 4

Today I visited the AER TKP garden city building for a symposium with Japanese, Dutch and Italian experts on Disaster Risk Reduction. Many examples of infrastructure merging with local ecosystems and population demands were explained.

Monday, March 16, 2015

WCDRR day 3

World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction in Sendai - day 3

In the middle of this conference I was able to visit 5 events on this day. The first was a technical session on the methods used in the Global Assessment Report 2015 at Tohoku university. The second and third took place at the International Center and covered financial aspects of disaster risk reduction. Another session there covered land use planning, while the last, at Tohoku university, was a very special session about the formation of a Delta Alliance, initiated by the Dutch government and attended by one of the Dutch princesses. 

Sunday, March 15, 2015

WCDRR day 2

World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction in Sendai - day 2

Today I visited 4 sessions, the first three at the Sendai international conference building and the last at Tohoku University, located on a beautiful hill side, at Hagi hall (presentations will follow). The hagi tree is the symbol of the university.
My main question during the presentation of the Global Assessment Report 2015 was how the work of the GAR differs from ICHARM's goal to make a risk index. The main points include ICHARM's focus on flood hazards, end point indicators of governance and resilience of communities, and the national level and cooperation with national governments in creating and applying the index data.

Saturday, March 14, 2015

WCDRR day 1

World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction in Sendai - day 1

Arriving in Sendai today, I only had time to visit two sessions after registration.The first session was held in the main conference building and concerned the Hyogo Framework for Action priority 2 where ICHARM member Sawano-san was a panel member; the second was a symposium held across town in the AEX tower where GRIPS students presented their finding. Below are the lessons learned from these sessions.

Thursday, March 5, 2015

International Workshop on Sustainability Science

At the International Workshop on Sustainability Science from 4-5 March 2015, Dr. Lee Yee Cheong, Director of International Science, Technology and Innovation Centre for South-South Cooperation under the auspices of UNESCO (ISTIC) said in his keynote lecture “MDGs were unambitious, silo-like and government-centric. Wealth creation and employment were not included. The next CSDs have not only 17 goals but also 169 targets. Unfortunately, however, reduction of military budget is not included. I consider G4 equitable quality education and G5 Gender equality most important.”
It is promising to see many world leaders are paying more attention to vulnerable people, now we have to see it translated into policies. At the upcoming World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction in Sendai (14-18 March) the successor of the Hyogo Framework for Action will come into shape, setting the stage for the coming 15 years of both DRR and the new MDGs.

Friday, February 27, 2015

News in Japan - February

USA:
Heavy rainfall events becoming more frequent on Big Island, Hawaii
Flooding in U.S. Midwest more frequent, study finds; Research covered more than 50 years of data in 14 states
U.S. plan would keep highways, federal buildings away from flood areas
Emotions, not science, rule U.S. climate change debate - study

Netherlands:
Book launch: Dutch Dikes gives well documented overview of 22,500 km dikes
Dutch minister Schultz talks about flood risk reduction with Mexican water agency Conagua
http://www.overstroomik.nl/ Dutch tool to see which areas are subject to flooding (sea and major rivers only)
http://www.dwarshuis.com/aardbevingen-groningen/ Earthquake visualization tool for Groningen, Netherlands (artificially induced earthquakes due to gas drilling)

Other:
Aqua-Aero Watersystems delivers RO treated groundwater for 0,47 eurocent in Gujarat India
UN-Water conference Zaragoza: Economic growth both blessing and curse
Satellite science improves storm surge forecasting around the world
ENHANCE video just released
Floods created home of Europe's biggest waterfall
New tools to breed cereal crops that survive flooding
GAR15 to seek fresh start

Vulnerable people:
Weather warnings go unheeded where most needed (global) Local people are usually left out of efforts to gather information that could help keep them safe, and their knowledge is largely ignored by scientists, according to a major report on water-related disasters presented at the conference. Developing an early warning system alone is not enough for communities to avert disasters, where these are delivered without tailoring them for vulnerable groups. India was cited as a country that withheld forecasts for “strategic reasons”, refusing to share them with neighbours Pakistan, Nepal and Bangladesh. China also failed to communicate flood predictions to neighbours Myanmar, Laos, Cambodia and Vietnam.