part ii: typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

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LANDFALL ON FRIDAY MORNING, NOV. 8

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A flawed premise: one typhoon disaster anywhere should be enough to make any nation susceptible to typhoons adopt and implement policies that will lead to their own typhoon disaster resilience. Once again, 2013’s disasters demonstrated that it usually takes multiple disasters before the stricken nation adopts policies to become disaster resilient. Presentation courtesy of Dr. Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction

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Page 1: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

LANDFALL ON FRIDAY MORNING, NOV. 8

Page 2: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

REMEMBERING SOME OF THE LESSONS FROM 2013’S DISASTERS

PART 2: TYPHOONS

Page 3: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

SUPER TYPHOON HAIYAN DEVASTATES THE PHILIPPINES;

NOVEMBER 8-10, 2013

Page 4: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

HAIYAN REACHED THE PHILIPPINES: FRIDAY, NOV. 8

Page 5: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

LANDFALL ON FRIDAY MORNING, NOV. 8

Page 6: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

WIND AND WATER PENETRATE BUILDING ENVELOPE

TYPHOONS

UPLIFT OF ROOF SYSTEM

FLYING DEBRIS PENETRATES WINDOWS

STORM SURGE

HEAVY PRECIPITATION

FLASH FLOODING (MUDFLOWS)

LANDSLIDES (MUDFLOWS)

CAUSES OF RISK

CASE HISTORIES

Page 7: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

ONCE AGAIN, 2013’S DISASTERS DEMONSTRATED THAT IT

USUALLY TAKES MULTIPLE DISASTERS BEFORE THE

STRICKEN NATION ADOPTS POLICIES TO BECOME DISASTER

RESILIENT

MOST UNAFFECTED NATIONS USUALLY DON’T LEARN ANYTHING NEW AND

DON’T CHANGE EXISTING POLICIES

Page 8: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

A FLAWED PREMISE: ONE TYPHOON DISASTER

ANYWHERE SHOULD BE ENOUGH TO MAKE ANY NATION

SUSCEPTIBLE TO TYPHOONS ADOPT AND IMPLEMENT POLICIES THAT WILL LEAD TO THEIR OWN

TYPHOON DISASTER RESILIENCE

Page 9: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

EXAMPLE: THE PHILIPPINES

Page 10: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES HAVE HAD MANY

OPPORTUNITIES TO LEARN VITAL LESSONS

FROM PAST TYPHOONS OF ALL SIZES MAKING LANDFALL THERE

The Philippines has more than enough experience with typhoons for action.

Page 11: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

A FLAWED PREMISE: BY NOW, THE PHILIPPINES

SHOULD HAVE POLICIES IN PLACE FOR TYPHOON DISASTER

RESILIENCE (i.e., A SUPER TYPHOON SHOULD NOT

MAKE THAT MUCH DIFFERENCE WHEN THE POLICIES ARE RIGHT)

Page 12: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

LESSON: THE TIMING OF ANTICIPATORY ACTIONS IS VITAL

• The people who know: 1) what to expect (e.g., high-velocity winds, rain, flash floods, landslides, and storm surge), 2) where and when it will happen, and 3) what they should (and should not) do to prepare will survive.

Page 13: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

LESSON: TIMELY EARLY WARNING AND EVACUATION SAVES LIVES

• The people who have timely early warning in conjunction with a community evacuation plan that facilitates getting out of harm’s way from the risks associated with storm surge, high winds, flooding, and landslides will survive.

Page 14: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

LESSON: EMERGENCY MEDICAL PREPAREDNESS SAVES LIVES

• Damaged hospitals and medical facilities combined with lack of clean drinking water, food, and medicine, and high levels of morbidity and mortality will quickly overrun the local community’s capacity for emergency health care.

Page 15: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

LESSON: WIND ENGINEERED BUILDINGS SAVE LIVES

• Buildings engineered to withstand the risks from a typhoon’s high velocity winds will maintain their function and protect occupants and users from death and injury.

Page 16: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

LESSON: EMERGENCY RESPONSE SAVES LIVES

• The “Uncontrollable and Unthinkable” events will always hinder the timing of emergency response operations.

Page 17: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

LESSON: THE INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY ALWAYS PROVIDES AID

• The International Community provides millions to billions of dollars in relief to most nations to help “pick up the pieces, ” but this strategy is not enough by itself to ensure disaster resilience.

Page 18: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

HAIYAN: A SUPER TYPHOON

Page 19: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

RATED AS PROBABLY THE STRONGEST TYPHOON EVER TO STRIKE THE

PHILIPPINES

Page 20: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

HAIYAN MOVED TOWARDS VIETNAM AND CHINA: SAT., NOV 9

Page 21: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

ADVANCE EVACUATIONS

• 800,000 people were evacuated to emergency shelters.

Page 22: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

AN EVACUATION CENTER

Page 23: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

FOUR HOURS OF FEAR AND DESTRUCTION

• Winds flattened hundreds of homes.• Heavy rainfall triggered mudslides and

flash flooding.• A storm surge with waves of up to 10 m

(30 feet) destroyed everything, sweeping people away and drowning thousands.

Page 24: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

AN AERIAL VIEW• It was like a tsunami," Interior

Secretary Manuel Roxas told Reuters.• "From a helicopter, you can see the

extent of devastation. From the shore and moving a kilometer inland, there are no structures standing.

Page 25: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

DESTRUCTION EVERYWHERE

Page 26: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

TACLOBAN (ON LEYTE ISLAND) HIT THE HARDEST

Page 27: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

SURVIVOR STORIES

• Survivors of the storm described towering waves that swept away all but the most robust engineered structures.

Page 28: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

STORM SURGE

Page 29: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

DESTRUCTION EVERYWHERE

Page 30: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

DESTRUCTION EVERYWHERE

Page 31: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

DESTRUCTION EVERYWHERE

Page 32: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

DESTRUCTION AND DEATH EVERYWHERE

Page 33: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

DESTRUCTION EVERYWHERE

Page 34: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

TACLOBAN AIRPORT

Page 35: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

INITIAL IMPACTS IN THE PHILIPPINES

• Wide spread flooding, mudslides, and power outages

• Winds of 380 kph (290 mph)• TACLOBAN hit very hard by the

storm surge with many deaths• Tacloban’s airport destroyed

Page 36: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

INITIAL IMPACTS IN THE PHILIPPINES

• Loss of communication• An estimated 10,000 people

dead• Economic losses in the billions

Page 37: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

SURVIVOR NEEDS• Survivors are in desperate need of

clean drinking water and food• Survivors temporarily cut off from aid,

and from their families in the Philippines as well as in other countries (e.g., 3 million in the USA)

Page 38: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

USA MILITARY FORCES DISPATCHED TO ASSIST IN WHAT BECAME A HISTORIC

RELIEF EFFORT

Page 39: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

Search and Rescue and Relief Efforts Were Hampered by

Landslides and Damaged Road Systems

LESSON: All Kinds of Things Will go Wrong During the Emergency Response

Period When the Uncontrollable and Unthinkable Happen.

Page 40: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

TYPHOON DISASTER RESILIENCE POLICIES AND MEASURES NEEDED BY

MANY NATIONSPreparedness

Adoption and Implementation of a Modern Wind Engineering Building Code

Time,y Early Warning and EvacuationTimely Emergency Response (including

Emergency Medical Services)Cost-Effective Recovery

Page 41: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

WAYS TO ACCELERATE PROGRESS TOWARDS TYPHOON RESILIENCE

EXPERIENCES WITH PREPAREDNESS

EXPERIENCES WITH MONITORING AND WARNING

EXPERIENCES WITH DISASTER SCENARIO PLANNING

EXPERIENCES WITH RECOVERY AND RECONSTRUCTION

EXPERIENCES WITH PREVENTION, MITIGATION, AND ADAPTATION

INTEGRATE GLOBAL EXPERIENCES WITH YOUR EXPERIENCES

Page 42: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

THE CHALLENGE:

POLICY CHANGES: CREATE, ADJUST, AND REALIGN PROGRAMS, PARTNERS AND PEOPLE UNTIL YOU HAVE CREATED THE KINDS OF TURNING POINTS NEEDED FOR MOVING TOWARDS TYPHOON RESILIENCE

Page 43: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

COMMUNITIES

DATA BASES AND INFORMATION

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

• TYPHOON HAZARDS

• INVENTORY• VULNERABILITY• LOCATION

TYPHOON RISK

RISKACCEPTABLE RISK

UNACCEPTABLE RISK

TYPHOON DISASTER RESILIENCE

• PREPAREDNESS• PROTECTION• FORECASTS/SCENARIOS• EMERGENCY RESPONSE• RECOVERY and RECONSTRUCTION

POLICY OPTIONS

Page 44: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

CREATING TURNING POINTS FOR TYPHOON DISASTER

RESILIENCE

USING EDUCATIONAL SURGES CONTAINING THE PAST AND PRESENT LESSONS TO FOSTER AND ACCELERATE THE CREATION OF TURNING

POINTS

Page 45: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

2014--2020 IS A GOOD TIME FOR A GLOBAL SURGE IN

EDUCATIONAL, TECHNICAL, HEALTH CARE, AND POLITICAL CAPACITY

BUILDING IN ALL FIVE PILLARS OF COMMUNITY

DISASTER RESILIENCE

Page 46: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

CREATING TURNING POINTS FOR TYPHOON DISASTER

RESILIENCE

INTEGRATION OF SCIENTIFIC AND TECHNICAL SOLUTIONS WITH POLITICAL

SOLUTIONS FOR POLICIES ON PREPAREDNESS, PROTECTION, EARLY

WARNING, EMERGENCY RESPONSE, AND RECOVERY

Page 47: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters
Page 48: Part II: Typhoons. 2013 remembering some of the years lessons from disasters

INTEGRATION OF TECHNICAL AND POLITICAL CONSIDERATIONS

THE KNOWLEDGE BASE

Best Practices for Mitigation Adaptation and Monitoring

Gateways to a Deeper Understanding

Real and Near- Real Time MonitoringHazard, Vulnerability and Risk Characterization

Anticipatory Actions for all Events and Situations

Situation Data Bases

Interfaces with all Real- and Near Real-Time Sources

Cause & Effect Relationships

APPLICATIONS

Implement Modern Codes and Lifeline Standards

Relocation/Rerouting of Cities and City Lifelines

Create a Hazard Zonation Map as a Policy Tool

Introduce New Technologies

Move Towards A Disaster Intelligent Community

EDUCATIONAL SURGES

Involve Partners in Turning Point Experimemts

Enlighten Communities on Their Risks

Build Strategic Equity Through Disaster Scenarios

Multiply Capability by International Twinning

Update Knowledge Bases After Each Disaster

OPPORTUNITIES FOR TURNING POINTS: For Disaster Resilience on local, regional, national, and global scales