EXPECTED CLIMATE IMPACTS

Similar documents
Assessing climate change induced displacements and its potential impacts on climate refugees: How can surveyors help with adaptation?

COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS. IFRC perspective and responses to Natural Disasters and Population Displacement

2 The Indian constitution uses the term to refer to Vulnerable groups. 1. Muslims 2. Weaker Sections 3. Christians 4.

Percentage of people killed by natural disaster category: 2004 and Natural disasters by number of deaths

Chapter 3: Regional Characteristics of Natural Disasters

Presentation to side event at the Civicus forum OCHA 6 November 2017

International Migration, Environment and Sustainable Development

POLICY BRIEF THE CHALLENGE DISASTER DISPLACEMENT AND DISASTER RISK REDUCTION ONE PERSON IS DISPLACED BY DISASTER EVERY SECOND

Human Mobility in the Context of Disasters and Climate Change Pacific Regional Capacity Building Workshop

International Environmental Law and Migration: Fitting the Bill?

Commission on the Status of Women Fifty-second session New York, 25 February 7 March 2008 EMERGING ISSUES PANEL. Gender Perspectives on Climate Change

Disasters and disaster management in india based on the essay of anjana majumdar

Protection of persons affected by the effects of climate change, including the displaced Observations and Recommendations

WOMEN. LEADERSHIP, DEVELOPMENT & AID: a critical review Farah Kabir

Thematic Area: Disaster Risk Reduction and Resilience

Climate change and human rights

LEAVE NO ONE BEHIND. Disaster Resilience for Sustainable Development

THE VOICE OF THE COMMUNITIES OF LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN

Natural Disaster Data Book 2016 An Analytical Overview

EMERGENCIES. REFUGEES, IDPs AND CHILD SOLDIERS NATURAL DISASTERS. For every child Health, Education, Equality, Protection ADVANCE HUMANITY

AGENDA FOR THE PROTECTION OF CROSS-BORDER DISPLACED PERSONS IN THE CONTEXT OF DISASTERS AND CLIMATE CHANGE

Environment, climate change and migration nexus. Global meeting of RCPs October 2011 Gaborone, Bostawana

The Right to Survive. The humanitarian challenge for the twenty-first century. Summary

Natural disasters, sea-level rise and environmental migration. Jürgen Scheffran

CEDAW/C/GC/37. General Recommendation No. 37 on Gender-related dimensions of disaster risk reduction in the context of climate change

INPUT TO THE UN SECRETARY-GENERAL S REPORT ON THE GLOBAL COMPACT FOR SAFE, ORDERLY AND REGULAR MIGRATION

A STATE-LED PROCESS WORKING TOWARDS BETTER PROTECTION FOR PEOPLE DISPLACED ACROSS BORDERS IN THE CONTEXT OF DISASTERS AND CLIMATE CHANGE

A/RES/44/236 85th plenary. 22 December. International Decade for Natural Disaster Reduction

Montessori Model United Nations. Distr.: Upper Elementary Eleventh Session XX March Second Committee Economic and Financial

SAARC Disaster Management Centre

States Obligations under the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, in the Context of Climate Change

BUILDING RESILIENCE CHAPTER 5

Chapter 1. Introduction. 1.1 Context Methodological Challenges and Gaps...5

Migration, Immobility and Climate change: Gender dimensions of poverty in coastal Bangladesh

Chapter 4: Overview of Natural Disasters in Asian and ADRC Member Countries

CONCEPT NOTE. The First Arab Regional Conference for Disaster Risk Reduction

1.4. Emergencies in Africa

Report on Disaster Management System of Myanmar and Visiting Researcher Program

Haiti UN/ Logan Abassi. September 2008

EXIT. gtav. VCE Geography Resource for students

SRHR, population dynamics and sustainable development Interconnected challenges and solutions.

UNIVERSITY GRANTS COMMISSION NET BUREAU

TEXTS ADOPTED Provisional edition. European Parliament resolution of 16 January 2018 on women, gender equality and climate justice (2017/2086(INI))

TASK FORCE ON DISPLACEMENT

CLIMATE CHANGE AND HUMAN MIGRATION: LAW AND POLICY PROSPECTS IN SOUTH ASIA

WOMEN AND GIRLS IN EMERGENCIES

Security Management in European Disaster Response Operations

10 Worst Disasters (fatalities) in the past 3 decades

Natural Disasters and Refugee Protection

«Project of Disaster risk reduction in Haïti» French Red Cross Workshop DIPECHO 24th 25th October 2011 Santo Domingo

Gender, labour and a just transition towards environmentally sustainable economies and societies for all

ADRA India. Emergency Management and Disaster Preparedness

Planned relocation as an adaptation strategy. Marine FRANCK UNFCCC, Bonn 4 June 2014

DISASTER OCCURENCES

Resolution adopted by the General Assembly on 23 December [without reference to a Main Committee (A/69/L.49 and Add.1)]

Climate Change and Migration Robert Stojanov

Violation of Refugee Rights and Migration in India

The Need for International Policy for Environmental Refugees

H 7904 SUBSTITUTE A ======== LC005025/SUB A ======== S T A T E O F R H O D E I S L A N D

Strategic Framework

Lesson Learned Presentation. Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement, The Republic of the Union of Myanmar

Gender-responsive climate action: Why and How. Verona Collantes Intergovernmental Specialist UN Women

DISPLACED BY CLIMATE CHANGE

STANDING COMMITTEE ON PROGRAMMES AND FINANCE THIRD SESSION. 4-5 November 2008

In terms of the overall number of disasters, 2011 was a quiet year with the International

Vulnerabilities and Challenges: Asia

Reducing the risk and impact of disasters

1/24/2018 Prime Minister s address at Asian Ministerial Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction

Environmental Stress, Natural Disasters and Conflicts in Pakistan Titelmasterformat durch Klicken bearbeiten

Strategic Framework

Report TOT Regional Level Capacity Building for Professional on Implementation on SFDRR 5-9 December 2016

Final Report. Comprehensive Tsunami Disaster Prevention Training Course

The Power of. Sri Lankans. For Peace, Justice and Equality

UN Women submission Gender-responsive climate policy with a focus on adaptation and capacity-building, and training for delegates on gender issues

LDC Urban Climate Change Adaptation: Challenges and Opportunities. Matthew E. Kahn USC and NBER

Third year commemoration of the Haiti earthquake: Highlights of EU support to the country

Population, vulnerability and humanitarian crises

Dealing with Humanitarian Crises

Report Nansen Initiative Southern Africa Consultation

ILO STRATEGY FOR THE RECONSTRUCTION, REHABILITATION AND RECOVERY OF THE EARTHQUAKE AND TSUNAMI-AFFECTED COUNTRIES IN ASIA

DEltas, vulnerability and Climate

Disasters and Resilience Remarks at JICA/Friends of Europe Event Brussels, March 11, 2013

Santa Fe Declaration on Disaster Risk Reduction

Third International Conference on Early Warning Bonn, Germany, March Opening Address

Summary of the Online Discussion on Linking Gender, Poverty, and Environment for Sustainable Development May 2 June 17, 2011

Climate change and development

Disaster Resilience Samples

E-Policy Brief Nr. 7:

EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION SYSTEM FOR DISASTER MANAGEMENT - A STUDY

Linking Response to Development. Thank you very much for this opportunity to. speak about linking emergency relief and

15-1. Provisional Record

Data challenges and integration of data driven subnational planning

DISASTER RESPONSES IN2010

Committee on Women s Rights and Gender Equality. on women, gender equality and climate justice (2017/2086(INI))

DECLARATION OF THE SIXTH HIGH LEVEL MEETING ON DISASTER RISK REDUCTION, TUNIS, TUNISIA: 13 OCTOBER 2018

Integrated Strategies To Minimize The Socio-Economic Impacts On Climate Change Refugees

and welcome especially to United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR) committee. We

Forced migration: a new challenge

THE SITUATION. 24 September 2007

UNITED NATIONS CONVENTION TO COMBAT DESERTIFICATION IN THOSE COUNTRIES EXPERIENCING SERIOUS DROUGHT AND/OR DESERTIFICATION, PARTICULARLY IN AFRICA

Transcription:

EXPECTED CLIMATE IMPACTS Agriculture: impacts on food security Natural resources: water, energy, Health Social change: conflicts Increasing natural disasters 1

Climate change is unequivocal and global Frequency of heavy precipitation events increasing Surface temperatures increasing Tropospheric temperatures increasing Tropical cyclone intensity increasing Ocean heat content increasing UNEQUI VOCAL Extreme temperatures increasing Sea level rise IPCC More intense and longer droughts Area of seasonally frozen ground decreasing Glaciers and snow over decreasing 2

3

HURRICANE KATRINA 4

HURRICANE KATRINA 5

CYCLONE NARGIS: FLOODING IN OUTSKIRTS OF YANGON 6

DISASTERS NATURAL DISASTERS HUMAN DISASTERS SUDDEN SLOW ENVIRONMENTAL TECHNOLOGICAL - Earthquakes - Tsunami - Volcanic Eruptions - Floods - Landslides - Storms, Hurricanes, - Cyclones - Desertification - Drought - Greenhouse effect - Deforestation - Uncontrolled town planning, megacities - Drying Lakes - Chemistry (Bhopal, AZT) - Nuclear (Chernobyl) - Oil spill INTERACTIONS COMPLEX DISASTERS 7

HAZARD x VULNERABILITY = RISK H x V = R 8

Increasing vulnerability/complexity Development of megacities Growing inter-connection natural /technological disasters Technological dependance (power, computers, communication systems) Growing globalization = growing interdependency = growing vulnerability from distant disasters «Inconceivable» events 9

BREAKING THE LINK HAZARDS ARE INEVITABLE Prevention Preparedness Risk management DISASTERS ARE NOT INEVITABLE 10

11

HURRICANE DEAN: CATEGORY 2 STORM ON AUGUST 16 12

HURRICANE DEAN: PHOTO FROM ENDEAVOR ON AUGUST 18 13

CYCONES IN BANGLADESH Facts: In 1970, a cyclone caused 400.000 deaths and left 1.3 million homeless Installation of a cyclone early warning system In 1985, thanks to the early warning, a cyclone of same intensity caused a number of deaths limited to 10.000 14

CYCLONE NARGIS APPROACHING BANGLADESH: MAY 1, 2008: 15

CYCLONE NARGIS: FLOODING IN OUTSKIRTS OF YANGON 16

MYANMAR CYCLONE Inadequate warning and evacuation systems Inadequate advance preparations Limited expertise for disaster assistance 17

West Coast of Aceh (Widjo Kongko, 2005) (after Kameda) 18

Barriers to disaster reduction perception of inevitability; fatalism prevention measures neglected information about natural disasters and disaster reduction techniques is not disseminated planning divorced from hazard management 19

Women are more vulnerable to natural hazards Women are key actors in disaster preparedness 20

Women constitute up to 80% of refugee and displaced populations In emergency situations women and children make up 70 to 80% of those needing assistance 21

Bangladesh Cyclone 1991 Women aged 20-44: death rate was 71 per 1000 Men aged 20-44: death rate was 15 per 1000 (IUCN) IUCN) 22

WHY ARE WOMEN MORE VULNERABLE Biological,, social and economical differences 1. Women have less access to resources 2. Women are victims of the gendered division of labour 3. Women are primarily responsible for domestic duties, are caregivers 23

WHY ARE WOMEN MORE VULNERABLE Biological,, social and economical differences 4. Early warning systems are orientated towards males 5. After a natural disaster, women are more likely to become victims of domestic and sexual violence 6. Migration due to climate change will leave women behind 24

TROPICAL CYCLONE SIDR: DESPAIR 25

26

27

Women s s role in Disaster Risk Management WOMEN ARE KEY ACTORS IN BUILDING, SHAPING AND SUSTAINING RESILIENT COMMUNITIES Photo Credit: Joanne Omang 28

Women s s role in Disaster Risk Management Women respond to disasters Building houses; digging wells and ditches; hauling water and building shelters, considered as male tasks. Forming groups and networks which is essential in disaster preparedness and mitigation. 29

Women s s role in Disaster Risk Management Women play decision-making roles in disaster issues Women and young girls play an important role in their families and communities (in health, education and childcare). Posted by Mayan Families; www.mayanfamilies.org/6a61re2.jpg 30

Promote Gender Concerns Launch global campaign on disaster reduction in which gender is fully mainstreamed Urge governments: policies and strategies with gender balanced approaches Establish focal points to promote gender balanced approaches at all levels 31

Looking to Natural Disasters from a Gender Perspective Ensure women s access to policy-making, information and knowledge on disaster reduction Respond to women's needs and concerns Increase efforts in promoting gender equalities Gender-based approach to the study on natural disasters Acknowledge women s vulnerable status Strengthen the dialogue within & between communities and the national government & capacity-building Assure women s access to relief resources 32

Good practices and Lessons Learned Hurricane Mitch, Honduras, 1998 Garifuna Emergency Committee of Honduras was created to promote women s s leadership in decision-making roles. Indian Ocean Tsunami, India, December 2004 Tsunami Relief and Rehabilitation Programmes were led by women from the communities involved. Earthquake, Pakistan, 2005 Potohar Organization for Development Advocacy (PODA) promotes women s s rights following a disaster. 33

Fresh water management should take into account the needs and role both of men and women through an equitable approach 34

Women and Water They have major role in managing communal & safe maintaining regulation & control of the social use of WATER SUPPLY 35

Women: collectors, users & managers of water They provide household water They cook, clean & take care of the sick They have vital role in agriculture 36

Limited access to energy has a disproportionate effect on women, especially in rural areas. -Risk for their health and safety -They are not able to perform essential child-care - Limits the opportunities for better education - Electricity is essential for creating new employment opportunities - Energy services enable improved food production and human well-being - Energy poverty is a main factor for increased migration ENERGY IS A KEY FACTOR IN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT 37

DISCRIMINATION LESS PAYMENT LESS EDUCATION LESS ACCESS TO NATURAL RESOURCES LESS FINANCIAL RESOURCES BEING MORE EXPOSED TO RISKS BEING EXCLUDED OF PLANNING & DECISION MAKING 38

The United Nations system engaged in disaster reduction World Meteorological Organization WORLD BANK 39

United Nations Educational Scientific Cultural (natural, environmental, social) (culture, communication, information) Organization 40

Long-term Goals Observation and early warning networks of natural hazards Hazard risk mapping Disaster-resistant resistant building codes Education for disaster reduction Help make schools safer Promotion of public awareness through communication Protection of cultural monuments and sites 41

Hydrological hazards Studies of hydrological processes of floods, Design of engineering works for flood control; Development of a decision-support support system for urban water disaster mitigation; International Flood Programme/Initiative. 42

International Consortium on Landslides 43

Drought/desertification The Man and Biosphere Programme (MAB). 44