DISASTER RECOVERY A PILLAR OF DISASTER RESILIENCE PART 2: EARTHQUAKES AND TSUNAMIS Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, University of North Carolina, USA
The Timely and Effective Concentration of Resources to Restore Critical Infrastructure, Financial Systems, and Development to Normal (or Better) After a Disaster
THE FOCUS: EMERGING FROM A DISASTER WITH A TIMELY, COST-EFFECTIVE, AND SUSTAINED RECOVERY PROCESS
A RECOVERY-READY CITY KNOWS WHAT IS NEEDED TO RESTORE SOCIETAL SYSTEMS AND DEVELOPMENT BEFORE DISASTER HAPPENS
A DISASTER OCCURS WHEN A CITY’S PUBLIC POLICIES ALLOW IT TO BECOME … UN—PREPARED UN—PROTECTED UN—ABLE TO RESPOND EFFECTIVELY NON—RESILIENT AFTER A DISASTER
A CITY BECOMES DISASTER RESILIENT WHEN IT IS … PREPARED FOR THE INEVITABLE NATURAL HAZARDS THAT ARE LIKELY TO OCCUR AT THE WRONG TIME AND IN THE WRONG PLACE RELATIVE TO THE CITY’S SOCIAL CONSTRUCTS
A CITY BECOMES DISASTER RESILIENT WHEN … ITS PEOPLE, BUILDINGS, INFRASTRUCTURE, ESSENTIAL AND CRITICAL FACILITIES ARE PROTECTED BY CODES, STANDARDS, ETC AGAINST THE POTENTIAL DISASTER AGENTS OF LIKELY NATURAL HAZARDS
A CITY BECOMES DISASTER RESILIENT WHEN … IT IS ABLE TO: A) RESPOND INTELLIGENTLY IN REAL TIME TO MOVE PEOPLE OUT OF HARM’S WAY, B) MEET THEIR NEEDS IN AN EMERGENCY, AND C) RESTORE THE CITY’S BASIC FUNCTIONS
A CITY BECOMES DISASTER RESILIENT WHEN … IT’S POLICIES NOT ONLY ENABLE IT TO RESPOND TO A DISASTER, BUT ALSO TO FACILITATE A QUICK, COST-EFFECTIVE, AND SUSTAINABLE RECOVERY PROCESS
NATURAL HAZARDS CAN CAUSE COMPLEX DISASTERS AND CHALLENGING RECOVERY SITUATIONS
EARTHQUAKE DISASTERS
DAMAGED BUILDINGS EARTHQUAKES COLLAPSED BUILDINGS FAILURE OF CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE LANDSLIDES (INCLUDING “QUAKE LAKES) FLOODING FROM UTILITY FAILURE AND DAM FAILURE FIRES RADIATION RELEASE RECOVERY MUST DEAL WITH CASE HISTORIES
EARTHQUAKES STRIKE CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND A SHALLOW (4.1 KM), M6.3 QUAKE LOCATED 5 KM FROM CHRISTCHURCH WAS MORE DESTRUCTIVE THAN DEEP ONE
EPICENTRES: SEPT 2010 AND FEB 2011 EARTHQUAKES
CHRISTCHURCH CITY CENTRE: “A WAR ZONE”
PYNE GOULD GUINESS BUILDING: COLLAPSED
COLLAPSED BUILDING; CHRISTCHURCH
COLLAPSE: A BAPTIST CHURCH
CRUSHED CARS: CHRISTCHURCH
BARACADED BUILDING; CHRISTCHURCH
INTERIOR CONTENTS
SEARCH AND RESCUE WORKERS
40 MILLION TON ICE CHUNK DISLODGED FROM TASMAN GLACIER
DISLODGED ICE IN TASMAN LAKE
CHRISTCHURCH SUBURB, BEXLEY: FLOODED
TSUNAMI DISASTERS RECOVERY CAN INVOLVE MANY NATIONS (e.g., The Pacific Rim or the Indian Ocean Countries)
LOSS OF BUILDINGS FROM WAVE RUN UP TSUNAMIS LOSS OF INFRASTRUCTURE FROM WAVE RUN UP FLOODING DEBRIS REMOVAL HOMELESS RECONSTRUCTION RADIATION RELEASE RECOVERY MUST DEAL WITH CASE HISTORIES
M9.0 TOHOKU EARTHQUAKE/TSUNAMI IMPACTS JAPAN WITH THE TSUNAMI WAVES REACHING PACIFIC RIM COUNTRIES 4TH LARGEST QUAKE EVER 3 – 10 M TSUNAMI WAVES 2:46 pm MARCH 11, 2011
FUKUSHIMA NUCLEAR FACILITY HAD 3 FAILURES
FIRE: NEAR SENDAI AIRPORT
PASSENGERS STRANDED: SENDAI STATION
TSUNAMI WAVES:NATON MYIAGI PREFECTURE
OARAI INUNDATED BY TSUNAMI
TSUNAMI WAVES REACH COAST OF NORTHERN JAPAN
SENDAI AIRPORT
SENDAI AIRPORT: COVERED WITH MUD FROM TSUNAMI
SENDAI AIRPORT: COVERED WITH CARS, MUD, & DEBRIS
SEARCH AND RESCUE: RIKUZENTAKADA
SEARCH AND RESCUE: TOYOMA
COMMUNITYCOMMUNITY DATA BASES AND INFORMATION HAZARDS: GROUND SHAKING GROUND FAILURE SURFACE FAULTING TECTONIC DEFORMATION TSUNAMI RUN UP AFTERSHOCKS NATURAL HAZARDS INVENTORY VULNERABILITY LOCATION RISK ASSESSMENT RISK ACCEPTABLE RISK UNACCEPTABLE RISK GOAL: DISASTER RESILIENCE PREPAREDNESS PROTECTION EMERGENCY RESPONSE RECOVERY IENCE FOUR PILLARS OF RESILIENCE
FOUR PILLARS OF DISASTER RESILIENCE RECOVERY ALL ELEMENTS ARE INTERRELATED PREPAREDNESSPROTECTION EMERGENCY RESPONSE ARE INTERCONNECTED