49501.ppt

50
LESSONS LEARNED FROM PAST NOTABLE DISASTERS. THE PHILIPPINES. PART 2: TYPHOONS, FLOODS, AND LANDSLIDES Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, Vienna, Virginia, USA

Upload: lary-bags

Post on 29-Nov-2015

25 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

grerjyjrjrtityjhsgthth

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 49501.ppt

LESSONS LEARNED FROM PAST NOTABLE DISASTERS.

THE PHILIPPINES. PART 2: TYPHOONS, FLOODS,

AND LANDSLIDES

Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, Vienna,

Virginia, USA 

Page 2: 49501.ppt

NATURAL HAZARDS THAT PLACE THE NATURAL HAZARDS THAT PLACE THE PHILIPPINES’ COMMUNITIES AT RISK PHILIPPINES’ COMMUNITIES AT RISK

NATURAL HAZARDS THAT PLACE THE NATURAL HAZARDS THAT PLACE THE PHILIPPINES’ COMMUNITIES AT RISK PHILIPPINES’ COMMUNITIES AT RISK

EARTHQUAKES

TYPHOONS

FLOODS

LANDSLIDES

VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS

GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE

ENACT AND IMPLEMENT POLICIES HAVING HIGH BENEFIT/COST FOR COMMUNITY RESILIENCE

ENACT AND IMPLEMENT POLICIES HAVING HIGH BENEFIT/COST FOR COMMUNITY RESILIENCE

GOAL: DISASTER GOAL: DISASTER RESILIENCERESILIENCE

GOAL: DISASTER GOAL: DISASTER RESILIENCERESILIENCE

Page 3: 49501.ppt

THE PHILIPPINES

Page 4: 49501.ppt

TYPHOONS

THE PHILIPPINES IS AT RISK EVERY YEAR FROM TROPICAL STORMS AND TYPHOONS FORMING IN THE WESTERN PACIFIC OCEAN, ESPECIALLY IF THEY CAUSE DEVASTATING FLOODING AND LANDSLIDES AFTER LANDFALL

Page 5: 49501.ppt

THE THE PHILPPINES’PHILPPINES’

COMMUNITIESCOMMUNITIES

THE THE PHILPPINES’PHILPPINES’

COMMUNITIESCOMMUNITIES

DATA BASES DATA BASES AND INFORMATIONAND INFORMATIONDATA BASES DATA BASES AND INFORMATIONAND INFORMATION

HAZARDS: GROUND SHAKING GROUND FAILURE SURFACE FAULTING TECTONIC DEFORMATION TSUNAMI RUN UP AFTERSHOCKS

•TYPHOON HAZARDS•BLDG. INVENTORY•VULNERABILITY•LOCATION

TYPHOON RISK TYPHOON RISK

RISK

ACCEPTABLE RISK

UNACCEPTABLE RISK

GOAL: TYPHOON GOAL: TYPHOON DISASTER RESILIENCEDISASTER RESILIENCE

• PREPAREDNESS•PROTECTION•EARLY WARNING•EMERGENCY RESPONSE•RECOVERY and RECONSTRUCTION

POLICY OPTIONSPOLICY OPTIONS

Page 6: 49501.ppt

Physics Of A Typhoon

Page 7: 49501.ppt

HAZARDS OF A SEVERE WINDSTORM (AKA POTENTIAL DISASTER AGENTS)

• WIND FIELD [CAT 1 (55 mph) TO CAT 5+ (155 mph or greater)]

• DEBRIS

• STORM SURGE/FLOODS

• HEAVY PRECIPITATION/FLOODS

• LANDSLIDES (MUDFLOWS)

• COSTAL EROSION

Page 8: 49501.ppt

WIND PENETRATING BUILDING ENVELOPE

TYPHOONSTYPHOONS

UPLIFT OF ROOF SYSTEM

FLYING DEBRIS

STORM SURGE

IRREGULARITIES IN ELEVATION AND PLAN

SITING PROBLEMS

FLOODING AND LANDSLIDES

CAUSES OF DAMAGE

CAUSES OF DAMAGE

“DISASTER LABORATORIES”

“DISASTER LABORATORIES”

Page 9: 49501.ppt

LESSONS LEARNED ABOUT DISASTER RESILIENCE

• ALL TYPHOONS • WITHOUT

ADEQUATE PROTECTION, HIGH VELOCITY WIND WILL LIFT THE ROOF OFF OF NON-ENGINEERED BUILDINGS.

Page 10: 49501.ppt

LESSONS LEARNED ABOUT DISASTER RESILIENCE

• ALL TYPHOONS.

• DISASTER-INTELLIGENT COMMUNITIES USE TIMELY EARLY WARNING BASED ON CRITICAL INFORM-ATION TO EVACUATE PEOPLE AND PREPARE.

Page 11: 49501.ppt

LESSONS LEARNED FOR DISASTER RESILIENCE

• ALL TYPHOONS• CAPACITY FOR

INTELLIGENT EMERGENCY RESPONSE IS ESSENTIAL FOR COMMUNITY RESILIENCE.

Page 12: 49501.ppt

NOTABLE PAST TYPHOONS THAT HAVE IMPACTED THE

PHILIPPINES

Page 13: 49501.ppt

“THE WORST” (in terms of deaths)

Tropical storm Uring, November 2- 7, 1991, killed 3,000 – 8,000,

mainly in Ormoc City.

Page 14: 49501.ppt

“THE MOST COSTLY”

Super Typhoon Reming, November 10- 14, 1990, caused

economic losses of 10, 840 billion pesos

Page 15: 49501.ppt

TYPHOON YUNYA: JUNE 1991

Page 16: 49501.ppt

TYPHOON YUNYA

• Yunya would normally have been uneventful, but the day it hit Luzon, was the same day the eruption of Mount Pinatubo took place.

• Pinatubo’s ash cloud, that normally would have been dispersed across the ocean, was redistributed over Luzon by Yunya’s winds, greatly exacerbating the damage caused by the eruption.

Page 17: 49501.ppt

TYPHOON YUNYA

• The water-laden ash fell over the evacuated Clark Air Force Base, as well as the rest of Luzon, resulting in downed power lines and the collapse of flat-roofed buildings.

• In some areas, it was practically raining mud.

Page 18: 49501.ppt

2011THE PHILIPPINES WAS HIT BY

19 TROPICAL STORMS AND TYPHOONS

Page 19: 49501.ppt

TRACKS OF 2011’S TYPHOONS

Page 20: 49501.ppt

FLASH FLOODS SPAWNED BY TROPICAL STORM WASHI KILLED OVER 652 IN THE

PHILIPPINES

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17, 2011

Page 21: 49501.ppt

WASHI, THE 19th STORM ARRIVED ON FRIDAY; DEPARTED ON SUNDAY

Page 22: 49501.ppt

AFTER MAKING LANDFALL ON FRIDAY, TROPICAL STORM WASHI DUMPED MORE THAN A MONTH’S

RAIN (200 MM) IN 10 HOURS ON MINDANAO, WHICH WAS NOT

(AND USUALLY IS NOT) IN THE PATH OF THE PREVIOUS TROPICAL STORMS AND

TYPHOONS OF 2011

Page 23: 49501.ppt

THE FLASH FLOODING AND MUDFLOWS, WHICH WERE TRIGGERED BY TROPICAL

STORM WASHI, HAPPENED AT 2:30 AM WHILE THE VICTIMS,

MOSTLY WOMEN AND CHILDREN, WERE ASLEEP

Page 24: 49501.ppt

ONE-FOURTH OF THE CITY OF ILIGAN WAS INUNDATED IN ITS WORST FLOOD EVER

Page 25: 49501.ppt

LOSS OF FUNCTION OF STRUCTURES IN FLOODPLAIN

FLOODSFLOODS

INUNDATION

INTERACTION WITH HAZARDOUS MATERIALS

STRUCTURAL/CONTENTS DAMAGE FROM WATER

WATER BORNE DISEASES (HEALTH PROBLEMS)

EROSION AND MUDFLOWS

CONTAMINATION OF GROUND WATER

CAUSES OF RISK

CAUSES OF RISK

CASE HISTORIESCASE HISTORIES

Page 26: 49501.ppt

OTHERS ATTENDING EARLY MORNING

CHRISTMAS MASSES WERE SURPRISED BY THE

FLASH FLOODING

Page 27: 49501.ppt

THE CITY OF CAGAYAN DE ORO IN THE NORTHERN

ISLAND OF MINDANAO WAS INUNDATED BY THE FLASH

FLOODS

Page 28: 49501.ppt

SITING AND BUILDING ON UNSTABLE SLOPES

LANDSLIDESLANDSLIDES

SOIL AND ROCK SUCEPTIBLE TO FALLS

SOIL AND ROCK SUCEPTIBLE TO TOPPLES

SOIL AND ROCK SUCEPTIBLE TO SPREADS

SOIL AND ROCK SUSCEPTIBLE TO FLOWS

PRECIPITATION THAT TRIGGERS SLOPE FAILURE SHAKING

GROUND SHAKING THAT TRIGGERS SLOPE FAILURE

CAUSES OF DAMAGE

CAUSES OF DAMAGE

CASE HISTORIESCASE HISTORIES

Page 29: 49501.ppt

LANDSLIDE: TROPICAL STORM WASHI

Page 30: 49501.ppt

MUDFLOW: TROPICAL STORM WASHI

Page 31: 49501.ppt

THE PHILIPPINE RED CROSS LED THE EMERGENCY RESPONSE EFFORTS

PROVIDING FOOD, WATER, AND RELIEF SUPPLIES

Page 32: 49501.ppt

20,000 SOLDIERS DEPLOYED TO HELP IN SEARCH AND RESCUE EFFORTS FOUND BODIES EVERYWHERE: IN

HOMES, IN THE STREETS, IN RIVERS, AND OFFSHORE

Page 33: 49501.ppt

PUBLIC OFFICIALS AND HEALTH CARE FACILITIES

WERE OVERWHELMED WITH THE NUMBER OF THE DEAD—ESTIMATED AT NEARLY 1,000

Page 34: 49501.ppt

RESCUE: CAYAGAN DE ORO, THE PHILIPPINES

Page 35: 49501.ppt

RESCUE: CAYAGAN DE ORO, THE PHILIPPINES

Page 36: 49501.ppt

RESCUE: CAYAGAN DE ORO, THE PHILIPPINES

Page 37: 49501.ppt

LLIGAN: RESIDENTS RETURN TO START THE RECOVERY PROCESS

Page 38: 49501.ppt

LESSONS LEARNED FOR DISASTER RESILIENCE

• ALL NATURAL HAZARDS

• CAPACITY FOR RECOVERY AND RECONSTRUCTION IS ESSENTIAL FOR COMMUNITY RESILIENCE.

Page 39: 49501.ppt

INTERNATIONAL ASSISTANCE FACILITATES RECOVERY

• THE USA, A LONG-TERM ALLY, PLEDGED IMMEDIATE ASSISTANCE OF ALL KINDS

• THE CHINESE GOVERNMENT PLEDGED FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE

Page 40: 49501.ppt

2012TYPHOON BOPHA STRIKES

THE PHILIPPINES

Page 41: 49501.ppt

THE FORECAST FOR THE 2012 PACIFIC TYPHOON SEASON

An above average season was forecast in expectation of El Nino’s impacts in the Pacific with significant impacts, as usual, in the Philippines, China, and Japan.

Page 42: 49501.ppt

24 STORM TRACKS AS OF

DECEMBER 17, 2012

Page 43: 49501.ppt

TROPICAL STORM MAWAR: PHILIPPINES.; MAY 31-JUNE 6

Page 44: 49501.ppt

TROPICAL STORM DOKSURI: JUNE 25-30

Page 45: 49501.ppt

DOKSURI IMPACTED THE PHILIPPINES, TAIWAN, AND CHINA

• Over $54 million in wind and water damage.

Page 46: 49501.ppt

TYPHOON BOPHA: NOV. 29 - DEC. 5

Page 47: 49501.ppt

TYPHOON BOPHA

• Bopha, the most powerful typhoon to hit Mindanao in decades, had top winds of 175 kph (110 mph) as it came ashore over the city of Baganga.

• Bopha destroyed buildings, triggered flooding and landslides, and killed at least 95 people.

Page 48: 49501.ppt

TYPHOON BOPHA

• Millions of people living in remote and unprepared communities, were in Bopha’s path.

Page 49: 49501.ppt

A landslide in eastern Mindanao blocked a national highway, leaving hundreds of

people in buses, vans and cars stuck on the road.

Page 50: 49501.ppt

POLICY POLICY ADOPTIONADOPTION

POLICY POLICY ADOPTIONADOPTION

RISK ASSESSMENT

• VULNERABILITYVULNERABILITY

• EXPOSUREEXPOSURE

• EVENTEVENT

POLICY ASSESSMENT

• COSTCOST

• BENEFITBENEFIT

•CONSEQUENCESCONSEQUENCES

TOWARDS TYPHOON DISASTER TOWARDS TYPHOON DISASTER RESILIENCERESILIENCE

TYPHOONSTYPHOONSTYPHOONSTYPHOONS EXPECTED EXPECTED LOSSLOSS

EXPECTED EXPECTED LOSSLOSS