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13th ICCRTS International Command and Control Research and Technology Symposium

Assessment of C2 Maturity during the Disaster Relief Operations Indian Tsunami (2004) and Elbe Flood (2002). 13th ICCRTS International Command and Control Research and Technology Symposium C2 FOR COMPLEX ENDEAVORS 17-19 June 2008 The Meydenbauer Center, Bellevue, WA Paper I-095

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13th ICCRTS International Command and Control Research and Technology Symposium

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  1. Assessment of C2 Maturity during the Disaster Relief Operations Indian Tsunami (2004) and Elbe Flood (2002) • 13th ICCRTSInternational Command and Control Research and Technology Symposium • C2 FOR COMPLEX ENDEAVORS • 17-19 June 2008 The Meydenbauer Center, Bellevue, WA • Paper I-095 • Ulrike Lechner, Reiner K. Huber, Sebastian Richter, Jens Römer, • s.richter@.unibw.de • Institute of Technology of Intelligent Systems (ITIS) Universität der Bundeswehr, Munich • Acknowledgements: This research is based on the current work of SAS 065 working group“NATO Network Enabled Capability (NNEC) C2 Maturity Model“

  2. The NNEC C2 Maturity Model NNEC Feasibility Study C2 Approach Space C2 Maturity Levels Transformed (“Coherent”)‏ Operations Agile C2 Integrated Operations Collaborative C2 Coordinated Operations Coordinated C2 De-conflicted Operations De-conflicted C2 Stand Alone Operations Conflicted C2

  3. Complexity Idea Complexity of operations Set of dimensions Assessment of the degree of complexity (low, medium, high) Application of generic principles (Mitleton-Kelly, 2003) Connectivity Interdependence Co-evolution Far from Equilibrium Space of possibilities Self-organization

  4. The Indian Ocean Tsunami (2006)‏ 26 December 2004 Deadliest natural disaster in modern history Over 227,000 killed 1.7 million people in 14 countries displaced US$ 13.5bn in international aid. Over 1,000 non-government organizations engaged

  5. Some Observations UN coordination capabilities overwhelmed duplicated and inappropriateinternational aid competition between NGOs for prestigious projects, beneficiaries, facilities, material, and staff military played a key role in the early phases of the relief operation Effectiveness improved to the degree that international organizations had previously been able to work closely with local organizations (high mutual trust)

  6. Complexity - Tsunami Connectivity and Interdependence low high Co-evolution low high Far from Equilibrium low high Space of possibilities low high Self-organization low high Summarized Complexity Assessment low high

  7. Assessment of C2 Maturity - Tsunami LIAN LIAN: Local Individuals, Agencies, NGOs RAPN: Regional and Provincial Agencies, National NGOs NMF: National Military Forces IMF: International Military Forces UNRC: United Nations and Red Cross/Red Crescent IGGA: International Governments and Governmental Agencies: NGO: International Non Governmental Organizations: RAPN NMF IMF UNRC Most important relationships IGGA NGO Agile C2 Collaborative C2 Coordinated C2 De-conflicted C2 Conflicted C2

  8. Conclusions - Tsunami Selected recommendations from TEC report1: “fundamental reorientation of international humanitarian community from supplying aid to supporting and facilitating communities’ own relief and recovery priorities” implies that NGOs subordinate their intents to the intents of local communities “increased disaster response capacities and to improve the linkages and coherence between themselves and other actors in the international disaster response system“implies thatNGOs support development of a coherent international disaster response system and redefine their role  no central coordinating institution is able to manage operations of this kind ? High complexity disasters call for Collaborative C2! 1Telford, John and Cosgrave, John: Joint evaluation of the international response to the Indian Ocean Tsunami: Synthesis Report. Tsunami Evaluation Coalition (TEC), London 2006

  9. The Elbe Flood Disaster (2002) • August 2002 • Among the worst natural disasters in Germany • 80,000 people evacuated • 80,000 responders • 6.2 bn € material damage

  10. Characteristics of the Elbe-Flood Disaster • Information flow • Flood warning system reports actual water levels • Limited forecasting of water levels (no simulation) • Information chain involving several organizations and delay times • Limited information fusion • Result: slow information-push system with insufficient ability to • provide information for timely response • Flood development • Intensitiy of rain fall (rain quantity (12.08.2002) 4 times • higher than long-time average for entire month of August) • High water flow velocity in mountain rivers feeding the Elbe • Saturation of ground and exhaustion of reservoir capability • Response operation • Insufficient planning time / insufficient ability to anticipate • Little time for anticipative actions (limitation to reactive actions) • Damage to communication infrastructure caused coordination delays • Result: Operational tempo not high enough to proactively control disaster

  11. Complexity - Elbe-Flood Connectivity and Interdependence low high Co-evolution low high Far from Equilibrium low high Space of possibilities low high Self-organization low high Summarized Complexity Assessment low high

  12. Assessment of C2 Maturity - Elbe-Flood Response District Auth. Fire Deps German Armed Forces Federal Border Police THW State Police NGOs District Auth. Agile C2 Collaborative C2 Fire Deps Coordinated C2 German Armed Forces De-conflicted C2 Federal Border Police Conflicted C2 THW State Police NGOs

  13. Conclusions - Elbe-Flood Response Review commission1 assessed the approach of bottom-up activation of response resources and their centralized coordination as mature enough to manage the Elbe-Flood disaster operation Improvements of coordination capabilities recommended: joint training /exercises minor reorganizations of the disaster response system General conclusion: “Coordinated C2” is appropriate to manage interactions of a limited number(< 10) of hierarchically structured organizations in regional disasters of low complexity Coordinated C2 appropriate for disaster response of low complexity. 1von Kirchbach, H.-P., S. Franke, H. Biele, L. Minnich, M. Epple, F. Schäfer, F. Unnasch, and M. Schuster (2002) Bericht der Unabhängigen Kommission der Sächsischen Staatsregierung Flutkatastrophe 2002. Dresden

  14. Comparison of Case Study - Findings lower complexity of the Elbe Flood’s operational environment permitted a more efficient use of available resources as complexity of the operational environment increases so must C2 maturity

  15. Lessons Learned / Further Research Lessons Learned • Case studies validate assumptions underlying the NNEC C2 Maturity Model • Open question: What maturity level is required for which scenario. • Complexity is not sufficient to characterize a scenario • Dynamics is proposed as another scenario descriptor Hypothesis for further research: • Coordinated C2 sufficient for medium-high dynamics / low complexity scenarios • Collaborative C2 is required, and agile C2 desired, for high dynamics / high complexity scenarios

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