global risk modelling organisation exporting the gem model to other perils
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Global Risk Modelling Organisation exporting the GEM model to other perils. Mauro Dolce | Head of Seismic Risk Service, Italian Civil Protection Rui Pinho | Secretary General, GEM Foundation. THE NEED (a reminder). - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Global Risk Modelling Organisation
exporting the GEM model to other perils
Mauro Dolce | Head of Seismic Risk Service, Italian Civil ProtectionRui Pinho | Secretary General, GEM Foundation
Risk mitigation requires “accurate”, consensual and uniform risk information.
Since natural hazards know no political boundaries and do not necessarily occur frequently at the same location/country/region, a global knowledge-sharing approach is required,
which should lead also to the development of socio-economic impact assessment tools, including cost-benefit analysis,
involving both the public and the private sectors, as well as international organisations, professionals associations and the wider community..
THE NEED (a reminder)
CRITICAL FEATURES OF A RISK ASSESSMENT TOOL
It must consist of a state-of-the-art, independent, transparent/open and consistent standard/model to calculate risk
It must be dynamic, modular, flexible, expandable (i.e. not necessarily just a map or report)
It should serve the needs of all possible users, from the general public to the decision makers, communicating risk in an effective manner
It needs to be community-based and public-owned, in order to be consensual, accepted and actually used
It has to feature regional involvement and coverage, and facilitate technology-transfer
THE GLOBAL EARTHQUAKE MODEL
“A global collaborative effort aimed at engaging the global community
in the design, development and deployment of state-of-the-art
models and tools for earthquake risk assessment worldwide”
PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP
9 countries have adhered so far
discussions and negotiations are ongoing
with 15+ others
7 private organisations have partnered up with GEM so far
they contribute 13.6 M Euro
the OECD, WorldBank, UNESCO, UN/ISDR, IAEE and IASPEI are associative participants
After 2 years of activity:23 public-private partners have joined
75% of 5-year core budget secured
More than 50 institutions working on projects for development of global data & methods
More than 100 institutions involved on a regional scale
Hundreds of international experts actively engaged
First beta-release of the open-source computational software OpenQuake in January this year
Interaction with many stakeholders started already (e.g. Red Cross, UN-ISDR, World Bank, Media, etc)
Outreach Meetings (e.g. Washington 2010) with 250+ participants
Newsletter read by over 2000 subscribers
GEM SO FAR
GLOBAL COMPONENTS
HazardGlobal Earthquake History
Global Instrumental Earthquake CatalogueGlobal Active Fault and Seismic Source Database
Global Ground-Motion Prediction EquationsGlobal Geodetic Strain Rate Model
RiskGEM Ontology and Taxonomy
Global Exposure DatabaseGlobal Earthquake Consequences Database
Global Vulnerability Estimation MethodsInventory Data Capture Tools
Feeding and feedbacking global models..
REGIONAL PROGRAMMES
Global Exposure Database
Sub-Saharan Africa RP
South American RP
European RP
construction material, height, age, occupancy..
COLLABORATION ON DATA & METHODS
A GLOBAL COLLABORATIVE EFFORT
CALCULATING AND COMMUNICATING RISK
Scenarios of use of OpenGEM
GRMO - THE RATIONALE
Capitalise on the GEM experience (with both its successes and errors/lessons),
and thus introduce an initiative that would have the objective of establishing community-based uniform and open standards
for calculating and communicating hazard, vulnerability and risk data worldwide,
derived from natural and man-made hazards.
GRMO - THE RATIONALE
Such a (tentatively called) Global Risk Modelling Organisation (GRMO), would consist of an Intergovernmental Organisation aiming at: facilitating global integration of existing regional efforts (for those cases where these exist) enabling wider adhesion of member states (with respect to GEM)catering for economies of scale in the development of software and IT infrastructure, compiling exposure information, developing socio-economic impact toolseasing gathering of standardised, globally available multi-hazard datasets enabling comparison of various types of risks over wide geographical areas and transcending national and regional boundaries
POSSIBLE Structure
As mentioned already, GRMO would be an intergovernmental organisation, hence featuring the participation of member states (i.e. countries/governments) and associated participants (IGOs, International Associations, etc)
It would possibly comprise a General Assembly of member countries, a Steering/Monitoring Committee, and three main operative modules common to all types of risk, namely: Exposure, Socio-Economic Impact and IT Infrastructure
It is envisioned that “Strategic Programmes” would be organised/deployed for the different areas of risk, and possibly managed independently by dedicated organisations, associated to GRMO and located in different regions of the world, both in the northern and southern hemisphers.
POSSIBLE Structure
SERVING STAKEHOLDERS WORLDWIDE
GRMO
Disaster Management and Risk Programmes / Organisations
Global Scientific & Technical Community
• Universities and Research centres• Individual experts
(Earth Sciences, Climate Sciences, Social Sciences, Environmental/ Sustainability Studies, Geography /
Urban Planning, Information & Communication Techonology, Development Studies)
NGOs and Civil Society Organisations
Private Industry• Insurance• Banking• Utilities, Energy• Construction• Leisure/Tourism• Consultancy• Information & Communication Technology
Intergovernmental / other International Organisations
National, Regional and Local (City) Governments
Mediaonline / offline
Individuals
Engineering & Building Institutions
The models and tools are to meet the needs of a wide group of prospective users and beneficiaries and will need to include features that support the work of all those entities and individuals working and deciding on risk resilience and mitigation.
The models will, through their interfaces, allow for risk assessment at the community, national and international level and integration with many ongoing initiatives on disaster risk reduction.
SUGGESTED NEXT STEPS
- Initiate a wide scoping discussion with relevant organisations and/or initiatives, such as ISDR, WMO, UNESCO, UNU, TWB, IDRC, IRDR, ICSU, etc
- Tap the scientific communities in the different domains (floods, volcanoes, tsunamis, landslides, wildland fire, etc), through the corresponding global associations/initiatives, if already in-place (e.g. GEM, ICL, IFI, etc)
- Engage states/governments, at ministerial level, in these brainstorming discussions, so as to secure the necessary political backing (note that the institution of an IGO calls for parliamentary approval and adhesion of at least three countries)
- Partner with the private sector from the onset, since, as shown by GEM, this is key to the success of any such type of initiative
- Present and discuss the idea at venues such as the Global Science Forum of the OECD (meeting this Friday, in Lisbon), and at the upcoming Global Platform (feasible?)
AIMS
By operating at a global scale it will be possible to create synergy, share knowledge on natural and man-made hazards and approaches for risk assessment that will improve our understanding, and make it possible to enlarge datasets, especially in those areas where such information is hardly accessible.
Involving the global community is integral to the effort, to ensure that the models and tools are being developed and deployed collaboratively, in a transparent way and facilitated by open debate. In that way, GRMO hopes to build authority and to include ever-more experts, organizations and governments in its network, to support continuous improvement of the models and their application for users and beneficiaries around the globe.
GRMO aims thus to develop a flexible, modular platform for disaster risk assessment. This platform will enable both expert and basic users to execute applications, carry out disaster risk assessments on both regional and global scale, develop in-depth knowledge of socio-economic impact and to visualise risk maps, tables and curves and export these in compatible formats. The platform will connect individual users through a user network and will allow expert users to upload and ‘plug in’ their own data.
GRMO shall be the technical/scientific instrument to support decisions and actions reducing losses due to catastrophes, and shall integrate developments on the forefront of scientific research in several modules, including hazard, vulnerability, exposure, socio-economic impact and risk.