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The challenges and opportunities of post-disaster waste management

The challenges and opportunities of post-disaster waste management. Charlotte Brown charlotte.brown@canterbury.ac.nz (until 30 November 2012) lottiebrown@gmail.com. presentation outline. background e xisting plans and guidelines waste characteristics o perational strategies

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The challenges and opportunities of post-disaster waste management

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  1. The challenges and opportunities of post-disaster waste management Charlotte Brown charlotte.brown@canterbury.ac.nz (until 30 November 2012) lottiebrown@gmail.com

  2. presentation outline • background • existing plans and guidelines • waste characteristics • operational strategies • management considerations

  3. background disaster waste management

  4. background 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami Photo credit: Erica Seville, University of Canterbury

  5. 2005 Hurricane Katrina background Photo credit: Tim Townsend, University of Florida

  6. 2009 Victorian Bushfires background

  7. background 2010/2011 Christchurch earthquakes

  8. social impact Why is good disaster waste management important? economic impact environmental impact background

  9. existing plans and guidelines 2008 USEPA Planning for Natural Disaster Debris http://www.epa.gov/wastes/conserve/imr/cdm/pubs/pndd.pdf

  10. existing plans and guidelines 2011 UNOCHA Disaster waste management guidelines www.ochanet.unocha.org/p/Documents/DWMG.pdf

  11. existing plans and guidelines • current planning focusses on operational aspects. • it is challenging to plan for a very wide spectrum of disaster impacts. • a possible approach is to use disaster waste ‘indicators’ (see Brown, 2012 thesis, for more detail) • disaster scale • number of displaced persons • geographical extent of damage • duration of hazard event • damage to road network • volume of waste • human & environmental health hazards • movement of the waste (from point of origin), and • difficulty in handling the waste.

  12. waste characteristics - composition typical types of waste • vegetative • construction and demolition • personal property / household items • household hazardous wastes • white goods • soil, mud and sand • vehicles and vessels • putrescent

  13. how much waste? • varies widely between different disaster types and built environments. • FEMA have developed some waste estimation tools (FEMA, 2010, Debris Estimating Field Guide and FEMA, 2009, Multihazard loss estimation methodologies). • UNEP are currently developing some debris estimating tools. • some models have also been developed in Japan. waste characteristics - quantity

  14. waste characteristics- hazards Photo credit: Tim Townsend, University of Florida

  15. operational strategies

  16. operational strategies - collection Hurricane Katrina kerbside collection http://www.ees.ufl.edu/homepp/townsend/disaster/DD_Overview.pdf Photo credit: Tim Townsend, University of Florida

  17. operational strategies - collection 2009 Samoan tsunami clean-up

  18. operational strategies – handling Temporary storage in rice paddies and mangroves, following the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami

  19. operational strategies – handling Space needed: 50ha per 1,000,000 cu.m debris 2007 FEMA Debris Management Guide

  20. operational strategies – treatmentreuse / recyclingwaste to energy incineration

  21. operational strategies – final disposal Lyttelton Port Reclamation Christchurch, 2011

  22. management considerations • overall management and coordination: link with recovery authority • human resources: skilled and unskilled work, livelihood and capacity building opportunities • public participation • public communication • human health and environmental risk management: accept there will be higher risks • laws and regulation: flexible and bounded • funding – public vs private

  23. disaster waste has a significant impact on a community's social, economic and environmental recovery. • flexible planning is needed. • both operational and management aspects need to be considered. summary

  24. key references • UNOCHA, 2011. Disaster Waste Management Guidelines, January 2011, Emergency Preparedness Section, Joint UNEP/OCHA Environment Unit. • USEPA, 2008. Planning for Natural Disaster Debris EPA530-K-08-001, Office of Solid Waste and Emergency Response, Office of Solid Waste, USEPA. • Brown, C., 2012. Disaster Waste Management: a systems approach. PhD thesis. University of Canterbury. (in particular, Appendix N)http://ipac.canterbury.ac.nz/ipac20/ipac.jsp?index=BIB&term=1793295#focus • Brown, C., Milke, M. & Seville, E., 2011. Disaster Waste Management: a Review Article. Waste Management, 31, 1085-1098.

  25. charlotte.brown@canterbury.ac.nz thank you and questions?

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