The
Indian Ocean tsunami’s legacy
Margareta Wahlstrom ; The UN special coordinator for
Humanitarian Assistance to the Tsunami-Affected Countries
(2004-2005);
The head of the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction
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JAKARTA
POST, 22 Desember 2014
The
world has come a long way since 227,000 people from scores of countries lost
their lives in the Indian Ocean tsunami on Dec. 26, 2004.
Many of
those lives would have been saved if we had in place the Indian Ocean Tsunami
Warning System which now provides alerts through three regional watch centers
in India, Indonesia and Australia, and a network of 26 national tsunami
information centers.
It is an
efficient system which disseminated early warnings within eight minutes of
the Banda Aceh earthquake in 2012.
The
tsunami’s greatest legacy though resides in the attention it drew to the
issue of exposure to disaster risk in a way that no World Conference on
Disaster Risk Reduction could hope to achieve on its own.
By
coincidence, such a world conference did take place a few weeks after the
Indian Ocean tsunami. Interest spiked dramatically and 168 governments came
to Kobe — the scene of an earthquake which killed thousands in 1995 — in
Hyogo Prefecture, Japan, to adopt the world’s first comprehensive agreement
on the actions required to reduce loss of life and economic losses from
disasters.
Hundreds
of journalists also attended, propelled by the outpouring of grief and the
huge fundraising response to what has been described as the world’s first
global disaster. One unusual feature of that response was that it actually
exceeded the estimated economic losses inflicted by the tsunami.
The Indian
Ocean Tsunami launched a decade of unprecedented effort to spread a culture
of disaster risk management across the globe based on the priorities outlined
in the Hyogo Framework for Action (2005-2015) – Building the Resilience of
Nations and Communities to Disasters (HFA) which was the outcome document of
that world conference.
These
last 10 years have been punctuated by some of the worst disaster events in
living memory, the destruction of Port-au-Prince with the loss of over
200,000 lives, drought on the Horn of Africa, devastating earthquakes in
China and Pakistan, Cyclone Nargis in Myanmar, Hurricane Katrina in the USA,
the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami, Superstorm Sandy, wildfires in
Russia and floods in northern Thailand, to mention some.
All
point to the scale of the challenge that lies ahead as we grapple with a
world where hazard is often the mother of innovation, but all too often after
a major disaster event has ruthlessly exposed some underlying vulnerability
which had been either ignored or poorly understood.
Nonetheless,
a review of the last decade shows that mortality from weather-related
disasters can be reduced significantly is on the decline and there has even
been a significant drop in the numbers of people directly affected by
disasters in Asia and Europe.
In years
past, storms such as Typhoon Hagupit which hit the Philippines in early
December, or Cyclone Hudhud which hit India in November, would have claimed
many thousands of lives.
Thanks
to a combination of better organization and coordination, improved weather
forecasting, early warnings, public education, media engagement, better
response and preparedness, there has been a reduction in the numbers of
people dying in such disaster events.
That’s
the good news. But risk and opportunity are two sides of the same coin.
Economic
development and population growth are driving up our exposure to risk at an
unprecedented rate and this is reflected in the escalation of economic losses
this century, calculated by the UN Office for Disaster Risk Reduction to be
in the region of US$2 trillion.
As
negotiations continue on a revised HFA which will be adopted at the Third UN
World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction, in Sendai, Japan, in March 2015
(wcdrr.org), it is clear that reducing loss of life will remain a key
priority.
However,
there needs to be a dramatic scaling up of efforts to tackle economic losses
resulting from vanished jobs and homes, and damage to critical infrastructure
such as schools and hospitals, public transport, energy supply and
telecommunications.
If
planning laws and building codes are to be respected, there is a need to
continue the strengthening of governance and institutions to manage disaster
risk.
If these
don’t work, then there is a reduced chance of making progress against drivers
of risk such as poverty, uncontrolled urbanization, environmental degradation
and climate change.
The
world has built up an inspiring catalogue of practical ways to reduce disaster
risk such as Turkey’s drive to make all schools earthquake-proof by 2017, or
China’s success in keeping direct economic losses from disasters to within a
target of 1.5 percent of GDP for the last three years.
This holiday season we are remembering those who died in this tragic
event but we should also recognize that their deaths have not been in vain
and have contributed to making the world a safer and more resilient place. ●
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