RISK ASSESSMENT.
Disaster
risk management is the systematic
process of using administrative decisions, organization, operational skills and
capacities to implement policies, strategies and coping strategies of the
society and communities to lessen the impacts of natural hazards and related
environmental and technological disasters. This comprises all forms of
activities, including structural and non-structural measures to avoid
(prevention) or to limit (mitigation and preparedness) adverse effects of hazards.The foundation of disaster risk management lies in the
ability to assess imminent disasters in communities, this essay is therefore a discussion on disaster risk assessment ,what it is, how it is done,
how it impacts on risk reduction, its merits and demerits to the overall management of
disasters.
Risk refers to the probability of harmful impacts and
consequences, or expected human
Injury, environmental damage, loss of life, property and
livelihood, resulting from natural
hazards and vulnerable conditions (www.unesco.org/water - 2005). It
can be calculated as the interaction between the probability of a hazard
occurring and the vulnerability of a
community to the hazard, together with the capacity of the
community to cope with and
recover from a disaster (UN/ISDR 2004a). Understanding the
interaction of hazards, exposure and vulnerability is crucial to effective disaster prevention. Risk assessment
therefore is fundamental to development practitioners, communities, nations,
regional groupings and the International community at large who work on disaster risk reduction and
recovery. A comprehensive risk
assessment not only evaluates the
magnitude and likelihood of potential
losses but also provides
full understanding of the causes
and impacts of those
losses The main objective of risk assessment is to provide
objective and transparent information
for making decisions on
counter measures to reduce
disaster.
The United Nations(U.N)
through the International strategy for
disaster reduction (ISDR) in its
publication “Living with risk”
came up with a framework
on how to carry
out a disaster risk assessment. Thus a comprehensive assessment
should first and foremost seek
to understand the current
situation, needs and gaps inorder to assess what
already exists, to avoid
duplication of efforts
and to build on the existing information. This is done through a systematic inventory and
evaluation of existing risk assessment studies, available data and
information and current institutional
frameworks and capabilities. After that the
risk assessor should
carry out a hazard assessment
inorder to identify
the nature, location, intensity and likelihood of major
hazards prevailing in a community
or society.
Exposure assessment then
follows , this is done
to identify the population and assets
at risk and
delineate the disaster prone
areas. This is followed
by a vulnerability analysis
thus the assessor
seeks to establish the capacity(or lack of
it)of elements at risk to withstand the given
hazard scenarios. A loss or
impact analysis then
follows, this is done to
estimate potential losses of the
exposed population, property, services,
livelihoods and the
environment and to ascertain
the impact of
such losses to
society. Risk profiling then
follows thus at
this stage the
assessor is doing evaluations to identify
costs and propose
effective disaster risk
reduction strategies in terms of
the socio-economic concerns of the society. The final stage
is formulation of
disaster risk reduction
strategies and action
plans that may
include setting priorities,
allocating resources(human and
material )and initiating disaster risk
reduction programmes.
One is drawn to ask the crucial question, Why carry out a disaster
risk assessment? The answer
to this probably lies
in the new
paradigm shift whereby
development practitioners are
more concerned with
mitigation, preparedness and prevention of
disasters rather than providing relief aid post -disaster. The merits of
disaster risk assessment are numerous, notable among them
are that it helps
organizations and communities to establish relevant early
warning systems, it is multi-sectoral in
approach which therefore
means it involves various
stakeholders to get involved
in disaster management, it enables communities
to strengthen capacities, it helps minimize social
and economic impacts in
case of a disaster, it also discourages
dependency as it is bottom-up
in approach. However some
demerits do exist notable among them
is that it is a
long term project, it is not
legally binding stakeholders
can therefore dump the project
while still underway, it may face
the problem of lack
of political will and
as such political decisions
may take precedence over disaster
programmes,may lack resources –human
and material since it
is diverse in nature
and requires wide consultations.
The following is an
example of the
achievements made from risk assessment:
VietNam has a long tradition of disaster mitigation. When the United Nations
General Assembly designated the 1990s as the International Decade for Natural
Disaster Reduction, Viet Nam responded by organizing a National Committee and
strengthening the role its Central Committee for Flood and Storm Control (CCFSC)
plays in disaster mitigation. The CCFSC has developed programmes, plans and
measures for disaster reduction in coordination with other relevant
organizations, directed the implementation of disaster mitigation activities
and coordinated actions with relevant international organizations. In the late
1990s, Viet Nam experienced a number of extreme events, including Typhoon Linda
(1997) in the southern coastal area. Although the human and economic losses
were tragic, agencies at all levels strengthened their search and rescue
capacities, resulting in tens of thousands of evacuations. More than 5 000
people were saved by these efforts. Once the typhoon abated, the government
provided assistance to the local fishing communities. As a result of this and
other disasters, the government took policy decisions for each part of the
country, including improving flood resistance and protecting populated areas,
by strengthening the system of dykes and flood diversion structures in northern
Viet Nam, policies to prevent and mitigate flood damage in central Viet Nam,
and the Mekong River Delta policy which is designed to prepare measures for
living with floods and minimizing their damage. In recognition of these
achievements, the United Nations awarded Viet Nam the Certificate of
Distinction for Disaster Reduction on 11 October 2000, the International Day
for Disaster Reduction.(UNEP 2001).
REFERENCE LIST.
Mineral Policy Institute (2003) Trouble for Highlands Pacific?
Civil
Unrest Results in Bloodshed as Kainantu Mine Pushes Ahead Accessed
on
26/08/13 from http://www.mpi.org.au/campaigns/indigenous/highlands_trouble/
Social Security accessed on 23/09/13from http://www.catgen.com/pekerti-foundation/EN/100000010.html
Human Security accessed on 23/09/13 from http://humansecurity.gc.ca/
American Academy of Paediatrics (2002) The Youngest Victims:
Disaster
Preparedness to Meet Children’s Needs. Retrieved on 20/09/13 from:
http://www.aap.org/advocacy/releases/disaster_preparedness.htm
Wood, K. (2005), Vulnerability of Women in Disaster Situations.
Retrieved on 20/09/13 from: http://www.redcross.ca/article.asp?id=012396&tid=001
The effect of ageing worldwide: Reuters (2005). Accessed on
18/11/07 at:
www.globalaging.org
Ehrenreich J H (2001) A Guidebook to Psychosocial Intervention.
Centre
for Psychology and Society, State University of New York: Old Westbury,
NY.
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