1 / 61

INCORPORATING LAST YEAR’S DISASTER INFORMATION IN THIS YEAR’S EDUCATIONAL SURGES (Part 2)

INCORPORATING LAST YEAR’S DISASTER INFORMATION IN THIS YEAR’S EDUCATIONAL SURGES (Part 2). A PRIMER OF KNOWLEDGE THAT CAN MULTIPY AND SPILL OVER FOR THE BENEFIT OF MILLIONS. Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University of North Carolina, USA.

selena
Download Presentation

INCORPORATING LAST YEAR’S DISASTER INFORMATION IN THIS YEAR’S EDUCATIONAL SURGES (Part 2)

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. INCORPORATING LAST YEAR’S DISASTER INFORMATION IN THIS YEAR’S EDUCATIONAL SURGES(Part 2) A PRIMER OF KNOWLEDGE THAT CAN MULTIPY AND SPILL OVER FOR THE BENEFIT OF MILLIONS Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University of North Carolina, USA

  2. GOAL: COMMUNITY DISASTER RISK REDUCTION FLOODS IMPROVE ON PAST PERFORMANCE SEVERE WIND STORMS EARTHQUAKES INCREASED TECHNICAL AND POLITICL CAPACITY OF COMMUNITY TO COPE DROUGHTS INCREASED OWNERSHIP AND USE OF KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE LANDSLIDES WILDFIRES VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS TSUNAMIS GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE TECHNOLOGICAL HAZARDS

  3. WE ARE ALWAYS WRITING THE NEXT CHAPTER IN THE “GLOBAL BOOKS OF KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE” BOOK OF KNOWLEDGE - Perspectives On Science, Policy, And EM HI-ED BOOK OF EXPERIENCE - Perspectives On Science, Policy, And EM HI-ED

  4. EXAMPLE: FROM REAL TIME INFORMATION ON SEVERE WINDSTORMS IN 2008 TO A GLOBAL EDUCATIONAL SURGE THIS YEAR(Part 2) A SIMPLE CONCEPT WITH A HIGH BENEFIT TO COST RATIO

  5. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF WHAT HAPPENED DURING 2008

  6. NOTABLE DISASTER TYPES IN 2008 CYCLONE NARGIS NEW KNOWLEDGE FOR COMMUNITY DISASTER RISK REDUCTION WENCHUAN EARTHQUAKE FLOODING IN MIDWESTERN USA CATALYSTS FOR CHANGE TROPICAL STORMS AND HURRICANES WILDFIRES IN CALIFORNIA ERUPTION OF VOLCANO CHAITEN GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE

  7. 2008 TROPICAL STORM/HURRICANE/TYPHOON SEASONPART 2 JUNE 1 – NOVEMBER 30, 2008

  8. PATHS OF 16 NAMED ATLANTIC STORMS

  9. TYPICAL PHYSICAL EFFECTS AND IMPACTS HIGH VELOCITY WINDS HEAVY RAINFALL FLOODING LANDSLIDES POWER OUTAGES AGRICULTURAL LOSSES

  10. HURRICANE IKESEPTEMBER 3 – 13, 2008 Ninth Named Storm of 2008 Atlantic Hurricane Season

  11. HURRICANE IKE: PHOTO FROM ISS; SEPTEMBER 4, 2008

  12. HURRICANE IKE: A CAT 4 STORM; SEPTEMBER 3-13, 2008 HAITI, BAHAMAS (GRAND TURK ISLAND), CUBA, AND USA (TEXAS) IN IKE’S PATH GULF OIL PRODUCTION SHUT DOWN FOR GUSTAV ALSO IN IKE’S PATH

  13. HURRICANE IKE: SEPT 7, 2008

  14. HURRICANE IKE: HOLGUIN, CUBA; SEPT 8

  15. HURRICANE IKE: WHICH WAY WILL IT GO—EAST COAST OR GULF COAST; SEPT 9

  16. HURRICANE IKE: LIKELY IMPACT AREAS; SEPT 11

  17. HURRICANE IKE: SEPTEMBER 11

  18. HURRICANE IKE: EYE 200 MILES FROM LANDFALL; SEPT 12

  19. GALVESTON STORM SURGE BEGINS WITH EYE 200 MILES OUT, SEPT 12

  20. ALTHOUGH OVERTOPPED, GALVESTON SEAWALL HOLDS AGAINST 5 M STORM SURGE

  21. TEXAS GOV. RICK PERRY

  22. TEXAS GOV. RICK PERRY ASKS FOR AND RECEIVES PRESIDENTAL DISASTER DECLARATION FOR TEXAS ON SEPT 13

  23. HURRICANE IKE: MASS EVACUATIONS IN TEXAS;SEPT 11-12

  24. HURRICANE IKE: 1 MILLION EVACUATE GALVESTON, HOUSTON, AND COASTAL AREAS; SEPT 11-12

  25. HURRICANE IKE: 1 MILLION EVACUATE GALVESTON, HOUSTON, AND COASTAL AREAS; SEPT 11-12

  26. IKE MAKES LANDFALL

  27. HURRICANE IKE: A CAT 3 AT LANDFALL NEAR GALVESTON, TX; SEPT 12-13 STORM SIMILAR TO THE SEPTEMBER 1, 1900 HURRICANE DISASTER A FLOODING and A WIND EVENT STORM SURGE OF 6-7 m EXTENDING INLAND 25-35 km AND ALONG THE COAST FOR 200 km

  28. AT LANDFALL, GALVESTON WAS A GHOST TOWN

  29. AFTER LANDFALL Thousands of homes and businesses in Texas and SW Louisiana were damaged or flooded

  30. AFTER LANDFALL 20 MILES SSE OF GALVESTON The seawall in Galveston held, ... But, downtown Galveston and Houston became flooded ghost towns (because of the evacuation) with downed trees, debris, shattered glass, and damaged infrastructure.

  31. HURRICANE IKE: HOUSTON, TX; EVACUATED; SEPTEMBER 11-12

  32. HOUSTON: ALL WINDOWS BLEW OUT IN SOME TALL BUILDINGS

  33. AFTER LANDFALL: DEBRIS ALONG INTERSTATE HIGHWAY

  34. FLOODING IN SEABROOK, TX

  35. AFTER LANDFALL Texas’ and Louisiana’s oil production—20 percent of USA’s production– and Texas’ petrochemical industries survived with only minor problems.

  36. PETROCHEMICAL PLANTS EXPERIENCED MIMINAL DAMAGE

  37. IKE'S LEGACY AS A DISASTER The number of deaths was low because of excellent forecasts and realistic preparedness. Millions were safely evacuated. Initial estimates of economic losses from damaged homes and infrastructure reached 8 billion dollars.

  38. TROPICAL STORM KYLE BECOMES HURRICANE KYLE (See Part 3)

  39. FOUR UNIVRSAL BARRIERS TO USE OF LAST YEAR’S INFORMATION • IGNORANCE • APATHY • DISCIPLINARY BOUNDARIES • LACK OF POLITICAL WILL

  40. EDUCATIONAL SURGES CREATE TURNING POINTS ALL SECTORS OF SOCIETY INFORMED IGNORANCE TO ENLIGHTENMENT EDUCATIONAL SURGES WILL CHANGE THE COMMUNITY APATHY TO EMPOWERMENT BOUNDARIES TO NETWORKS STATUS QUO TO GOOD POLITICAL DECISIONS

  41. EDUCATIONAL SURGE RELEVANT PUBLIC AWARENESS BASIC OBJECTIVES FOR LAUNCHING AN EDUCATIONAL SURGE INCREASE UNDERSTANDING POLITICAL ENABLEMENT BUILD EQUITY

  42. BENEFITS OF EDUCATIONAL SURGES EXPAND CAPABILITY IMPROVE DELIVERY MECHANISMS EDUCATIONAL SURGES OVERCOME UNIVERSAL BARRIERS CREATE TURNING POINTS OF CHANGE INCREASE COMMUNITY DISASTER RESILIENCE

  43. Hazard Characterization Policy Makers Update Knowledge Bases After Each Disaster Vulnerability Assessments Practitioners Disaster Scenarios Up Close, Virtual, and Distance Learning Risk and Loss Assessments Emergency Managers Intelligent Emergency Management Disaster-Risk Reduction Training Tailored to Community Needs Cause & Effect Relationships Information Technology Real & Near Real Time Information Flow Interface with Multiple Networks Increased Understanding TOPICS AND TARGETS OF EDUCATIONAL SURGES A PROCESS THAT PENETRATES SOCIETY THE KNOWLEDGE BASE CAPACITY BUILDING CONTINUING EDUCATION

  44. BENEFITS OF AN EDUCATIONAL SURGE • Increasing the "World's Mutual Fund for Education,"(i.e., the in-country resources for education in the budget of every nation) • Using conferencesand other meetings on different scales will eventually overcome the universal barriers ofignorance, apathy, disciplinary boundaries, and lack of political will

  45. BENEFITS OF AN EDUCATIONAL SURGE • Increased community disaster-risk reduction for all (includingMega-cities, whichare a special challenge) • Transferring ownership of knowledge and technologyfor increasing disaster-risk reduction for people, habitats, livelihoods, cultural heritage, and infrastructure

  46. BENEFITS OF AN EDUCATIONAL SURGE • Facilitates equipping, linking, and engaginglegions of new and emerging professionals with mature professionals • Intensifies effortsin high-risk locations. • Increases risk reduction for essential (schools) and critical (hospitals, dams, and power plants) facilities.

  47. MEASURING CHANGE NEW RESOURCES NEW DELIVERY MECHANISMS EDUCATIONAL SURGES SHOULD RESULT IN … NEW PROFESSIONAL LINKAGES NEW LEGISLATIVE MANDATES NEW DIALOGUE ON BUILDING A CULTURE OF DISASTER-RISK REDUCTION

  48. PRINCIPLES (Improving on the past) REDUCTION IN MAGNITUDE OF SOCIO-ECONOMIC LOSSES FROM NATURAL HAZARDS MEASURING CHANGE

  49. PRINCIPLES (Improving on the past) REDUCTION IN NUMBER AND MAGNITUDE OF ANNUAL NATURAL DISASTERS MEASURING CHANGE

  50. PRINCIPLES (Improving on the past) INCREASED EFFECTIVENESS OF EDUCAT-IONAL SURGES TO BUILD PROFESSIONL CAPACITY FOR DISASTER-RISK REDUCTION MEASURING CHANGE

More Related