1 / 22

Presented by Mr. Phetsavang Sounnalath- Director NDMO/Lao PDR

Assessment impact of flood to socio-economics of along Namngum river of Nasaithong and Xaythany districts (1995-2004)by using ECLAC methodology. Presented by Mr. Phetsavang Sounnalath- Director NDMO/Lao PDR. Content of presentation;. project background purpose of assessment

vito
Download Presentation

Presented by Mr. Phetsavang Sounnalath- Director NDMO/Lao PDR

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Assessment impact of flood to socio-economics of along Namngum river of Nasaithong and Xaythany districts (1995-2004)by using ECLAC methodology Presented by Mr. Phetsavang Sounnalath- Director NDMO/Lao PDR

  2. Content of presentation; • project background • purpose of assessment • implementing technique • impact assessment • ECLAC methodology • lesson learned and recommendation

  3. Map of Nasaithong and Xaythany districts

  4. Project background; • under project cooperation with UNESCAP on using ECLAC methodology to assess the impact of flood to socio-economics of selected areas along Namngum River of Nasaithong and Xaythany districts • the study covered Vientiane Mun. and two districts in general, but focused on 10 target villages. • 5 villages of Nasaithong and 5 in Xaythany districts, all are flooded almost every year. • The study had done on 4 sectors; agriculture, health, transport and education

  5. Purpose of assessment • first experiment on using ECLAC to Laos to compare with existing methods to find the gaps • to have more clear picture of flood impact in both sides direct and indirect in order to compare the total losses to development indicators • To build an example from NAMNGUM case and adapt to Laos in general • to build a factors that benefit for planning and persuading decision markers.

  6. Implementation technique • Building assessment team • Scope; determine the target area to be studied; 10 villages of two districts along NAMNGUM • Four sectors; social, agriculture, transport and education • working on data • set up the outcome

  7. The assessment of flood impact • social impact; • direct ;the loss of individual person and family income in flooded year from 30 – 45% • indirect; flood changed people habit and occupation • forced labor out of their places, many migrated to city or cross border • impacted to people food ration and health • exhausted effected people resources • put people in debt and make them poorer • effected to price of agricultural products • psychology impact; nerves and loss confidence……

  8. Flood impact • Agriculture; • direct; the impact and loss of paddy field, vegetable fields, fishponds and livestock • indirect; estimated the cost of rehabilitation of paddy and vegetable fields and fishponds, the cost of purchasing of replacement of poultry and animals • for example; in two study Nasaithong and Xaythany districts 2002

  9. Agriculture damage of Nasaithong district in 2002

  10. Agriculture damage of Xaythany district in 2002

  11. Flood impact to agriculture Direct loss; (calculation ) • Damage cost of agriculture area 1 ha= 3.991.000 kips • Damage cost of vegetable area 1 ha = 3.300.000 kips • Damage cost of maize field 1 ha = 2.564.000 kips Indirect loss; (estimate) • Estimate loss of rice yield 1 ha(4 tons) = 6.000.000 kips • Estimate loss of vegetable product 1 ha(3.5 tons)= 5.250.000 kips • Estimate loss of maize yield 1 ha(3 tons) = 4.500.000 kips

  12. Flood impact to health sector • The clinics and dispensary of two districts were not seriously effected due to the location facilities are not in risky places • flood created problems; - polluted and shortage of drinking water - damage to sanitation facilities; well, toilets - polluted environment, smelled dirt - born some diseases; diarrhea, foot disease - spending more money for treatment Direct loss; calculation of the cost for repairing wells and toilets Indirect loss; - estimate the cost for buying or transporting drinking water - cost of cleaning houses and other facilities

  13. Water and sanitation damage of study villages in 2004

  14. Flood impact to education sector • Some school were affected by strong wind and rain in flood period, but were not seriously damaged, only number of roofs, tables, chairs, benches and boards had been damaged • the direct cost of damage is estimate the cost of repairing facilities • indirect estimate is based on renting temporally place for school function will awaiting for repair in duration of 10 days (5 classes x 150.000 kips x days) • The total cost of damage for schools in 10 villages is 78.800.000 kips (see table 12 in the report)

  15. Flood impact to transportation and road • Problems; flood affected to roads every year • roads to villages had been damaged or cut for some time • increased cost of public and private transport during and after flood • Boards had been used to travel to some areas • The direct loss is calculation of repairing or rebuilding roads • Indirect loss is counted upraising price of transport cost

  16. Transport damage and loss of Sandin village 1996-2004

  17. Experience on using ECLAC • ECLAC provided comprehensive framework for analyzing flood impact to all sectors, it help drawing up full scenario of impact in both ways direct and indirect • provide more accurately factors for persuading decision on countermeasures such as; relief, rehabilitation and reconstruction • example can be used to assess the flood impact to countrywide especially important when it can compare percentage of losses to GDP • the existing method is showed that the current practice of estimation could bring to attention only about 50% of total damages and losses if compare to using an ECLAC method • This is the first time that indirect impact had been counted in assessment in Laos • poor recorded and stored of information in local community made gathered information has low accuracy • No experience and technique on estimating of indirect impact

  18. The total damage cost of 10 villages in 2004

  19. Recommendation • further adapting ECLAC to Laos at countrywide • training on ECLAC • NDMO should take the lead • propose structural works; building drainage system, earthen embankment, repairing roads and schools • running capacity building activities; improve an early warning and information dissemination, environmental management, training on disaster reduction

  20. Mekong September 2005

  21. Flood in 2005

  22. Thank you for attention

More Related