“The illiterate of the 21st century will not be those who cannot read and write, but those who cannot learn, unlearn, and relearn.” -Alvin Toffler

Friday, June 19, 2020

Climate Change. Systems Failure: Environmental Hazards


Special Report: Millions of abandoned oil wells are leaking methane, a climate menace
Nichola Groom

Reuters
Wed Jun 17, 2020 / 5:18 PM EDT


FILE PHOTO: Hanson Rowe, a landowner who blames a leaky gas well on his property for health problems, smells for the odor of gas emanating from an abandoned well on his property in Salyersville, Kentucky, U.S., February 28, 2020.
Reuters/Bryan Woolston

FILE PHOTO: Hanson Rowe, a landowner who blames a leaky gas well on his property for health problems, tightens a valve on an abandoned gas well on his property in Salyersville, Kentucky, U.S., February 28, 2020.
Reuters/Bryan Woolston

SALYERSVILLE, Kentucky (Reuters) - (This June 16 story corrects comparison in paragraph eight of climate damage from methane leaks to that from U.S. oil consumption. The leaks cause climate damage roughly equivalent to typical U.S. oil consumption in one day, not two days.)

In May 2012, Hanson and Michael Rowe noticed an overpowering smell, like rotten eggs, seeping from an abandoned gas well on their land in Kentucky. The fumes made the retired couple feel nauseous, dizzy, and short of breath.

Regulators responding to the leak couldn’t find an owner to fix it. J.D. Carty Resources LLC had drilled the well near the Rowes’ home in 2006 - promising the family a 12.5% royalty and free natural gas, which they never got. But Carty went bust in 2008 and sold the site to a company that was later acquired by Blue Energy LLC. Lawyers for both companies deny any responsibility for the leak.

A year later, Kentucky's Division of Oil and Gas declared the well an environmental emergency and hired Boots & Coots Inc - the Texas contractor that doused oil-well fires after the Gulf War - to plug it. During the 40-day operation, the Rowes retreated to a trailer on their property and lived with no running water to escape the gases and noise. Regulators determined the leak was a toxic blend of hydrogen sulfide, a common drilling byproduct, and the potent greenhouse gas methane.

"I wouldn't go through this again for $1 million,” said Hanson Rowe, who with his wife is suing the energy companies for compensation.

The incident, while extreme, reflects a growing global problem: More than a century of oil and gas drilling has left behind millions of abandoned wells, many of which are leaching pollutants into the air and water. And drilling companies are likely to abandon many more wells due to bankruptcies, as oil prices struggle to recover from historic lows after the coronavirus pandemic crushed global fuel demand, according to bankruptcy lawyers, industry analysts and state regulators.

Leaks from abandoned wells have long been recognized as an environmental problem, a health hazard and a public nuisance. They have been linked to dozens of instances of groundwater contamination by research commissioned by the Groundwater Protection Council, whose members include state ground water agencies. Orphaned wells have been blamed for a slew of public safety incidents over the years, including a methane blowout at the construction site of a waterfront hotel in California last year.

They also pose a serious threat to the climate that researchers and world governments are only starting to understand, according to a Reuters review of government data and interviews with scientists, regulators, and United Nations officials. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change last year recommended that U.N. member countries start tracking and publishing the amount of methane leaching from their abandoned oil and gas wells after scientists started flagging it as a global warming risk. So far, the United States and Canada are the only nations to do so.

The U.S. figures are sobering: More than 3.2 million abandoned oil and gas wells together emitted 281 kilotons of methane in 2018, according to the data, which was included in the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s most recent report on April 14 to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. That’s the climate-damage equivalent of consuming about 16 million barrels of crude oil, according to an EPA calculation, or about as much as the United States, the world’s biggest oil consumer, uses in a typical day. (For a graphic on the rise in abandoned oil wells, click tmsnrt.rs/2MsWInw )

The actual amount could be as much as three times higher, the EPA says, because of incomplete data. The agency believes most of the methane comes from the more than 2 million abandoned wells it estimates were never properly plugged.

The problem is less severe in Canada, where the bulk of oil production comes from oil sands mining instead of traditional drilling. The government estimated that its 313,000 abandoned wells emitted 10.1 kt of methane in 2018, far less than in the United States.

The global impact is harder to measure. The governments of Russia, Saudi Arabia, and China – which round out the top five world oil-and-gas producers – did not respond to Reuters’ requests for comment on their abandoned wells and have not published reports on the wells’ methane leakage.

Researchers say it’s impossible to accurately estimate global emissions from leaky abandoned wells without better data. But a rough Reuters calculation, based on the U.S. share of global crude oil and natural gas production, would place the number of abandoned wells around the world at more than 29 million, with emissions of 2.5 million tonnes of methane per year - the climate-damage equivalent of three weeks of U.S. oil consumption.

HIDDEN MENACE

In a forested area of western New York state in February, a group of state regulators, along with researchers from the State University of New York at Binghamton, trudged through the snow. They stopped at a rotting wooden structure encircling a rusted pipe.

Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) official Charlie Dietrich held a bright orange device over the heap. It emitted a high-pitched signal, and its screen showed a code indicating the presence of ignitable gas. A scent of petroleum wafted through the air.

“There’s some methane coming up out of there,” DEC Mineral Resources Specialist Nathan Graber said.

The abandoned well lies in the forests of Olean, New York, which was an oil boomtown at the turn of the 20th century. The site was one of 72 locations logged by geophysicists Tim de Smet and Alex Nikulin in December, researchers from Binghamton, using a drone equipped with a metal detector, part of a program launched in 2013 to help New York identify and plug abandoned wells.

New York’s DEC has records of 2,200 abandoned wells dating back to the late 1800s. But the state believes the actual number could be much higher, because of incomplete records.

“It’s a lot easier to find stuff when you know where to look,” Nikulin said.

The group is among an array of regulators, activists and federal agencies now seeking out abandoned wells from the U.S. Northeast to California. The heightened interest in the climate threat posed by the wells started with a 2014 study by Princeton graduate student Mary Kang, who was the first to measure methane emissions from old drilling sites in Pennsylvania. She concluded in 2016 that abandoned wells represent 5% to 8% of total human-caused methane emissions in the state.

“It's not like they leak for one year, and then they stop,” said Kang, now a professor of civil engineering at McGill University in Montreal. “Some of these have been there maybe for 100 years. And they are going to be there for another 100 years.”

Although the Trump administration has downplayed global warming and its link to fossil fuels, the U.S. Energy Department has been financing efforts to improve data on emissions from abandoned wells. Researchers from DOE’s National Energy Technology Laboratory (NETL) recently took measurements from more than 200 wells in Kentucky and Oklahoma and are planning field work in Texas. They plan to publish their data by next spring.

NETL researcher Natalie Pekney said the work was crucial to better understanding the climate impact of abandoned wells. Many wells don’t leak much or at all, she said, while others have “huge” methane emissions.

NETL had previously used aerial surveys to locate old wells in Pennsylvania – home to the massive Marcellus gas deposit – so drillers could avoid pushing fluids and gases up through old abandoned well sites deep in the state’s forests. Its researchers found many old wells contained bubbling fluids, an indicator of methane leaks.

GROWING PROBLEM

Nationwide, the number of documented abandoned wells has jumped by more than 12% since 2008, around the start of the hydraulic fracturing boom, according to the EPA estimates.

Many experts believe the number will keep growing. Oil-and-gas firm bankruptcies in the United States and Canada rose 50% to 42 in 2019, and analysts say the rate is likely to accelerate as the pandemic-related slide in energy prices shakes out producers.

Research firm Rystad Energy estimates that about 73 U.S. drilling companies could go bankrupt this year, with an additional 170 succumbing in 2021, assuming an average oil price of $30 a barrel.

“When prices are this low, it becomes a very serious problem. It becomes a fight over who is going to ultimately have to pay” for cleaning up abandoned wells, said John Penn, a bankruptcy attorney with Perkins Coie LLP in Dallas. “It makes it really bad, and it's going to get worse.”

A school district in Beverly Hills, California, was saddled with a bill of at least $11 million to plug 19 oil wells on the property of its high school, after a judge in 2017 absolved Venoco LLC - the bankrupt company that had been operating the wells - of any responsibility for clean-up because other creditors took priority. The city of Beverly Hills is contributing another $11 million to the job.

“This is an incredible amount of money" siphoned away from education, said Michael Bregy, superintendent of the Beverly Hills Unified School District.

State and federal regulations normally require drillers to pay an up-front bond to cover future cleanups if they go belly-up. But the rules are a patchwork, with wildly differing requirements, and they seldom leave governments adequately funded. In Pennsylvania, for example, it would take several thousand years to plug its estimated backlog of 200,000 abandoned oil wells at the current rate of spending, according to data from the state regulator.

Oil-industry lobbyists have been fighting state and federal efforts to increase the bonding, arguing it would hurt jobs and economic growth during an already tough time for the industry.

“States and the federal government have many sources of funding available to reclaim and plug abandoned wells,” said Reid Porter, a spokesman for the American Petroleum Institute, the country’s largest oil and gas trade group.

The API spent $1.44 million in the first quarter of 2020 lobbying on Capitol Hill, with oil well bonding legislation one of the target issues, lobbying disclosures show.

The U.S. Government Accountability Office estimates that cleaning up and plugging an abandoned well runs from $20,000 to $145,000, putting the price tag for cleaning up all of America’s abandoned wells somewhere between $60 billion to $435 billion.

'SHOOTING OUT OF THE EARTH’

The pollution threat goes beyond climate change. Leaks from abandoned wells have been found to contaminate groundwater and soil. In extreme cases, gas from abandoned wells has caused explosions.

In Ohio and Texas, state regulators have each found an average of around two groundwater contamination incidents per year related to orphaned wells, according to research by the Groundwater Protection Council published in 2011 and dating to the 1980s.

In April 2017, for example, neighbors of Ohio farmer Stan Brenneman alerted him to the smell of oil coming from a drainage ditch on his 111-acre corn and soybean farm near the town of Elida, Brenneman told Reuters. The ditch drains water from the farm and carries it into rivers, streams and eventually Lake Erie.

Ohio’s Division of Oil & Gas Resources Management excavated 800 feet of the farm’s drainage system to find a well casing - about 130 years old - releasing oil three feet underground. The plugging operation took two months to complete and cost the state $196,915, according to a spokeswoman for the state Department of Natural Resources.

More recently, in 2018, the U.S. EPA was alerted to the presence of nearly 50 abandoned oil and gas wells on Navajo Nation lands within the borders of Utah and New Mexico that were bubbling water at the surface. Tests showed the way from some of the wells contained potentially dangerous levels of arsenic, sulfate, benzene and chloride.

The Navajo Nation Environmental Protection Agency said plugging the wells would require “major funds” and that, in the meantime, the public had been warned not to drink the water.

In rare cases, gas from long-abandoned wells can cause dangerous accidents.

In January of last year, a 1930s-era well sent a geyser of gas and dirt 100 feet into the air at the construction site of a Marriott seaside hotel in Marina del Rey, California, an upscale community in the Los Angeles area, according to a state report. The hotel owners did not respond to a request for comment.

“It was horrifying,” said resident Marilyn Wall, who witnessed the explosion from her home across the street. She said she was stunned “by the extent and the length of time that the stuff was shooting out of the earth.”

A worker standing on a construction platform above the plume was sprayed with debris and scrambled to lower himself down with an escape rope, a video of the explosion shows.

DON’T DRINK THE WATER

For Hanson and Michael Rowe, their troubles did not end the day their abandoned well was plugged. They no longer drink from the water well on their property because it gives them diarrhea, they said. Michael Rowe said she still suffers from headaches and coughing spells.

Kentucky’s Energy and Environment Cabinet is still fighting to recoup the $383,340 cost from the now-defunct J.D. Carty and Blue Energy in an ongoing court battle.

An attorney for John Carty, founder of J.D. Carty, said his client had sold what few assets remained in the company and therefore bore no responsibility. A lawyer for Blue Energy said the company denies ever operating the wells on the property and has no responsibility to maintain or plug them.

J.D. Carty was only required to have one $50,000 “blanket bond” to cover all its wells in Kentucky. The amount forfeited to pay for the leaky well on Rowe’s land, determined in part by its depth, was just $2,500 - less than 1% of the cost to fix it.

After the incident, Kentucky lawmakers passed a bill last year that effectively doubled bond requirements for shallow wells to help cope with the state’s 13,000 abandoned wells. Still, state regulators say the list of wells is growing.

Hanson Rowe said he supports fossil fuel development because using natural gas for heat and cooking has improved his quality of life. But the couple say they hope their lawsuit against the companies involved will help change the way the energy industry manages its wells.

“You lost your health, you’ve lost it all,” Hanson Rowe said.

(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Additional reporting by Ekaterina Golubkova in Moscow, Rania El Gamal in Riyadh; Editing by Richard Valdmanis and Brian Thevenot)
Our standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

© 2018Reuters. All Rights Reserved.


National Latino Farmers & Ranchers Trade Association 
1029 Vermont Avenue, NW, Suite 601
Washington, DC 20005
Office: (202) 628-8833
Fax No.: (202) 393-1816
Twitter: @NLFRTA
Website: www.NLFRTA.org 


Systems Failure: Food Security\Agriculture. Culture of Agriculture in Rural Communities.


The trust of rural folks needs to be earned
The politicized culture in some newsrooms reinforces an urban-rural divide.

Tim Hearden | Jun 17, 2020


Last December I had the opportunity to join Fresno County Farm Bureau CEO Ryan Jacobsen, grower Joe Del Bosque and a reporter from a small weekly newspaper in the San Joaquin Valley in a panel discussion of news coverage of agriculture.

The luncheon panel was hosted by the California Press Foundation, an arm of the California News Publishers Association, as the final presentation in the organization’s annual two-day conference at San Francisco’s ornate Marine’s Memorial Club.

Related: Recent flap highlights importance of ag media

On our panel, the audience – which consisted largely of newspaper publishers and other executives – sought our opinions as to how they could regain the trust of rural readers they’d lost amid the circulation declines of recent years. That’s been a favorite topic of mine for a couple of decades, as anyone who used to work with me at daily newspapers can attest.

The foundation put on a top-notch event, and I was honored to receive the invitation. I know my fellow panelists were, too.

Related: Pork producers battle 'fake meat', '60 Minutes'

At the same time, the gathering had an eerie quality as a relic of the past, much like the 74-year-old hotel and museum that housed it. The group has been meeting for over 140 years, but it wouldn’t have been too far-fetched to wonder if they’ll make it to 150.

It moved to Marines’ Memorial from a larger venue several years ago, and in 2018 its attendees filled a banquet room. But in December that same room was less than half full, and the organizers put up curtain partitions to make it a little less cavernous. The average age in the room was about on par with that of farmers, except you didn’t get the impression that younger generations were waiting to take over when dad or mom retires.

There are lots of reasons why the newspaper industry has declined so precipitously over the last few decades, with the proliferation of online news sources (including social media) perhaps the biggest. But another big one, according to surveys, is loss of trust in media generally. In my view, many news outlets have willingly ceded the trust and loyalty of half the population, and the half they forfeited consists largely of rural folks.

How have they done this? By enabling a politicized newsroom culture that reinforces an urban-rural divide. As just one example, amid the coronavirus shutdowns, one major California newspaper used cell phone records to name and shame the rural counties where people weren’t staying at home. Though the reason was that many were working in agriculture – an essential business – the reporter took to social media to chide rural folks for not believing in science.

In San Francisco, I and others encouraged the publishers to cover ag and rural issues consistently, learn about the issues and develop relationships with people. I resisted the urge to repeat what a peach grower once told me when I asked if he had advice for others.

“Give it up,” he said, “and buy from me.”

National Latino Farmers & Ranchers Trade Association 
1029 Vermont Avenue, NW, Suite 601
Washington, DC 20005
Office: (202) 628-8833
Fax No.: (202) 393-1816
Twitter: @NLFRTA
Website: www.NLFRTA.org 


First Nation. Grant Opportunity. Bureau of Indian Affairs Native American Business Development


DOI

Department of the Interior
Bureau of Indian Affairs
Native American Business Development Institute (NABDI) Grant; 
Solicitation of Proposals Synopsis 1


Register for the July 15 webinar Learn more about the development of the Managed Retreat Toolkit



News & Updates from
the Georgetown Climate Center


Save the Date:
GCC's Managed Retreat Toolkit Launch

Wednesday, July 15, 2020
12 PM ET / 9 AM PT


Please join the Georgetown Climate Center on Wednesday, July 15, 2020, for a webinar to launch GCC’s new Managed Retreat Toolkit.

Sea-level rise and increasingly frequent and intense extreme weather events are leading many coastal communities to confront difficult questions about how best to protect people, infrastructure, and coastal ecosystems from the impacts of climate change. Communities and states are increasingly considering managed retreat – the voluntary movement and transition of communities and ecosystems away from vulnerable coastal areas – as a strategy for climate adaptation.

The first comprehensive online resource on managed retreat, GCC’s new Managed Retreat Toolkit combines legal and policy tools, best and emerging practices, and case studies to support peer learning and decisionmaking around managed retreat and climate adaptation. Between 2018 and 2020, GCC’s outreach efforts related to the development of the Managed Retreat Toolkit have engaged more than 1,000 people at more than 20 events, a testament to the growing interest in this important topic. 

Contact climate@georgetown.edu for questions about the webinar. For questions about the toolkit, contact Katie.Spidalieri@georgetown.edu. GCC would like to thank the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the other generous funders who support GCC's work for making this project possible.





Global crises leads to the evolution of technology. June 2020

7 Techniques to Improve Emergency Preparedness Through Situational Awareness 

Global crises leads to the evolution of technology; each iteration to any organization’s response plan is the sum of painful lessons on the significance of situational awareness.


DOWNLOAD PDF 

Too Much Information. Information Overload in the Time of COVID-19



With so much data coming in from COVID-19, agencies are challenged to not only collect and store it, but also to make it available for analysis and decision support now and in the future. 
Taking the time to ensure data quality upfront by scaling their ability to discover, collect, cleanse, govern and catalog information quickly will help agencies better respond to the pandemic and strengthen data management moving forward.

Thursday, June 18, 2020

I ❤️ Black People Community conference call to discuss Juneteenth. June 20, 2020 Time based on Location


BillMari Inc.

Hello Charles --
Join us this Saturday, June 20th for an interactive online Black People Community conference call to discuss Juneteenth, celebrated annually on the 19th of June in the United States to commemorate orders read in the city of Galveston, Texas, on 19 June 1865, proclaiming that all enslaved persons in the U.S. state of Texas were now free
Date: June 20th, 2020
Time:
  • 10 am Washington DC
  • 2 pm Ghana, Guinea, Liberia, Sierra Leon, The Gambia
  • 3 pm Nigeria, Cameroon
  • 4 pm Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, Rwanda, South Africa, Zambia, Zimbabwe
  • 5 pm Kenya, South Sudan, Tanzania, Uganda
  • 10 pm China
Make sure you download Zoom before the call
WHEN IT’S TIME to get on the call, make sure to have a good internet connection and join the call using this link:
Join Meeting👉🏾 https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84678199928

Disaster Risk Reduction documents and publications. June 2020


*  A dual disaster handbook: 6 recommendations for local leaders responding to floods during COVID-19 American Flood Coalition (AFC), 2020

In 2020, local leaders across the United States will likely face an unprecedented threat that requires significant collective action: a flood that hits during the COVID-19 pandemic and its economic fallout. This “dual disaster” will likely be widespread: 128 million Americans are at risk of flooding this spring, and the country is likely to see more hurricanes than normal this season. This handbook for local leaders provides six recommendations...

Themes: Disaster Risk Management
Hazards: Epidemic & Pandemic; Flood


*  A method for monetising the mental health costs of flooding Environment Agency, United Kingdom - gov; Welsh Government, United Kingdom - gov, 2020

Recent research from Public Health England (PHE) shows that people that experience flooding in their homes can suffer from mental health illnesses, including depression, anxiety and post-traumatic stress disorder. This has an economic impact, including costs to the health service and lost days at work. This project developed a method for evaluating the impact of flooding on mental health and assessing these economic impacts. Prior to this study, the...

Themes: Social Impacts & Social Resilience
Hazards: Flood


*  A model to predict flood loss in mountain areas Environmental Modelling & Software (Elsevier), 2020

Vulnerability is defined as the degree of loss resulting from the hazard impact on buildings. Recent studies have focused on evaluating vulnerability to dynamic flooding using proxies from case studies and based on empirical ex-post approaches. However, the transferability to other case studies and, therefore, the ability of such models to actually predict future losses is limited. To overcome this gap, the authors present a beta model based on loss...

Themes: Economics of DRR; Structural Safety
Hazards: Flood


*  Adapting to climate change in Sub-Saharan Africa International Monetary Fund (IMF), 2020

Sub-Saharan Africa is the region in the world most vulnerable to climate change. Rising temperatures, rising sea levels, and rainfall anomalies are increasing the frequency and intensity of natural disasters and are markedly transforming the region’s geography. Adapting to climate change is critical to safeguarding and further advancing hard-earned improvements in incomes and education and health outcomes across sub-Saharan Africa over...

Themes: Climate Change; Economics of DRR


*  Adaptive social protection: Building resilience to shocks Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery, the (GFDRR); World Bank, the (WB), 2020

The report outlines an organizing framework for the design and implementation of Adaptive Social Protection (ASP), providing insights into the ways in which social protection systems can be made more capable of building household resilience. By way of its four building blocks—programs, information, finance, and institutional arrangements and partnerships—the framework highlights both the elements of existing social protection systems that...

Themes: Economics of DRR; Information Management; Social Impacts & Social Resilience


*  Anticipatory action for livelihood protection: A collective endeavour Overseas Development Institute (ODI), 2020

The term ‘anticipatory action’ refers to actions triggered before a crisis in order to mitigate the worst effects, or even avoid a crisis altogether. Decisions on how to protect livelihoods continue to be taken when a crisis is already happening and delays in mobilising funds to respond are commonplace. This working paper argues that the potential benefits of anticipatory action can only be achieved if the central focus moves from identifying...

Themes: Early Warning; Information Management; Risk Identification & Assessment


*  Assessment of Climate Change over the Indian Region Springer, 2020

The aim of this assessment report is to describe the physical science basis of regional climate change over the Indian subcontinent and adjoining areas. The first chapter briefly introduces global climate change, sets the regional context, and synthesizes the key points from the subsequent chapters. Apart from GHGs, emissions of anthropogenic aerosols over the northern Hemisphere have substantially increased during the last few decades, and their...

Themes: Climate Change; Environment & Ecosystems


*  Atlas of global surface water dynamics European Commission Joint Research Centre (JRC), 2020

It is impossible to overstate the importance of freshwater in our daily lives – for proof, try going without it for any length of time. Surface waterbodies (lakes, ponds, rivers, creeks, estuaries… it doesn't matter what name they go under) are particularly important because they come into direct contact with us and our biophysical environment. But our knowledge concerning where and when waterbodies might be found was, until recently,...

Themes: Climate Change; Science and Technology; Water


*  Capacity assessment of tsunami preparedness in the Indian Ocean – status report 2018: executive summary United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization - Headquarters (UNESCO), 2020

Recognising the importance of conducting an up-to-date capacity assessment of tsunami preparedness in the Indian Ocean 13 years after the first survey, the ICG/IOTWMS at its 11th session (Putrajaya, Malaysia, April 2017) established a Task Team on Capacity Assessment of Tsunami Preparedness (TT-CATP). The Task Team designed and conducted an online survey covering all aspects of the end-to-end tsunami warning and mitigation system. Twenty ICG/IOTWMS...

Themes: Capacity Development; Disaster Risk Management
Hazards: Tsunami


*  Climate change, conflict and fragility: an evidence review and recommendations for research and action Overseas Development Institute (ODI), 2020

This report looks at the evidence on the links between violent conflict and climate-related hazards, disasters and natural resources. It explores the relationship between conflict and short-term, extreme weather events (such as tropical storms), and other natural disasters (such as earthquakes) that can trigger humanitarian disasters. It also considers slow-onset and long-term changes in natural resources related to the climate (such as drought and...

Themes: Climate Change; Fragility and conflict


*  Community engagement for COVID-19 infection prevention and control: A rapid review of the evidence Community Health Community of Practice (CH CoP), 2020

This rapid evidence review looks at the community engagement for infectious disease prevention and control, to learn lessons for the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) worldwide and future pandemic response. Some of the key learnings on Community Engagement (CE), is: Preparation Early discussions and negotiation with communities is critical for understanding socio-cultural contexts and developing culturally appropriate prevention and control strategies;...

Themes: Community-based DRR; Social Impacts & Social Resilience
Hazards: Epidemic & Pandemic


*  Coordinating climate finance in Kenya: technical measures or political change?
Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI), 2020

This policy brief analyses how climate finance is being coordinated in Kenya, focusing on current efforts as well as the barriers and challenges hindering further effectiveness of climate finance coordination mechanisms. The authors assessed Kenya’s climate finance coordination through a combination of policy analysis and interviews with key stakeholders within the country’s climate finance landscape. This brief makes the following policy...

Themes: Climate Change; Economics of DRR; Governance


*  COVID-19 risk assessment tool: Dual application of risk communication and risk governance Progress in Disaster Science, 2020

Risk awareness is the best way to prevent and slow down the transmission of the COVID-19 pandemic and is achieved through the communication of risk assessment. Effective risk communication is an important measure to control infodemics as well. Most risk assessment tools focus on either tracking affected patients or diagnosing a probable health condition through their symptoms. The Resilience Innovation Knowledge Academy (RIKA) in India has introduced an...

Themes: Risk Identification & Assessment; Science and Technology
Hazards: Epidemic & Pandemic


*  Disaster property insurance in Uzbekistan: Overview and recommendations Global Facility for Disaster Reduction and Recovery, the (GFDRR); World Bank, the (WB), 2020

This report aims to provide a detailed overview of the current status of disaster insurance for residential property in Uzbekistan, identify gaps, and provide recommendations for a way forward. It is structured in three main parts. The first part provides an overview of Uzbekistan disaster profile and buildings’ seismic vulnerability based on a risk assessment performed for the Kyrgyz Republic. The second part provides an overview of the local...

Themes: Governance; Risk Identification & Assessment; Structural Safety


*  Disaster risk reduction in the Republic of Kiribati Asian Disaster Preparedness Center (ADPC); United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction - Regional Office for Asia and Pacific (UNDRR AP), 2019

This Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) report provides the latest snapshot of the DRR progress the Republic of Kiribati has achieved under the four priorities of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction. It also highlights some of the key challenges surrounding the issue of creating coherence among the key global frameworks at the country level; and makes recommendations for strengthening the overall Disaster Risk Management (DRM) governance by...

Themes: Disaster Risk Management; Small Island Developing States (SIDS)


*  Drivers and barriers of adaptation initiatives – how societal transformation affects natural hazard management and risk mitigation in Europe Science of The Total Environment (Elsevier), 2020

In this study, the authors interrogate drivers and barriers of societal transformation in natural hazard management through case studies in Austria, France and Ireland focusing on attempts to integrate multi-functional protection schemes in the context of flood and avalanche hazards. The authors find that transformative approaches have been mainly supported by local initiatives instigated by local governments, residents, or NGOs with the aim of complementing...

Themes: Disaster Risk Management; Social Impacts & Social Resilience
Hazards: Avalanche; Flood


*  Enhancing access to services for migrants in the context of COVID-19 preparedness, prevention, and response and beyond United Nations Network on Migration, 2020

Effective COVID-19 preparedness, prevention and response require a migrant-inclusive approach regarding access to services at the national and local levels. By including migrants in national plans, including socio-economic response plans, impact analysis, policies and strategies, gaps in health and other inequities such as access to education and information, training and decent work will be diminished, strengthening efforts towards...

Themes: Disaster Risk Management; Human Mobility; Inclusion
Hazards: Epidemic & Pandemic


*  Estimating resiliency benefits of road upgradation: Case of the East Road in Malaita, Solomon Islands World Bank, the (WB), 2020

Governments and their multilateral partners are increasingly recognizing the importance of incorporating climate and disaster resilience considerations into infrastructure development plans as well as the related construction and financing decisions. The objective of this paper to estimate the resiliency benefits, in terms of key socioeconomic outcomes, under several road up-gradation options and rainfall scenarios. The estimated benefits are compared...

Themes: Climate Change; Small Island Developing States (SIDS); Structural Safety


*  Financing for climate adaptation – an overview of current regimes Institute of Development Studies (IDS), 2020

This report reviews the main funding mechanisms for climate adaptation/resilience programmes in developing countries. This rapid review finds that the majority of climate adaptation and resilience activities in developing countries are financed through domestic resources. However, the academic and policy literature reviewed does not reveal much about how these revenues are generated. The international public sector finance is heavily skewed towards...

Themes: Climate Change; Economics of DRR


*  Flood early warning system development: a case study Plan International Indonesia, 2020

This case study makes the case for the effectiveness of early warning and the role of young people in flood preparedness in Jakarta, Indonesia. The document concludes that young people play a very important role in mobilizing peers so that their involvement could usefully increase the resilience towards floods. The authors propose the following recommendations to the authorities: Provide program support and sufficient budget allocation; Support young...

Themes: Children and Youth; Early Warning; Governance
Hazards: Flood


*  Global financial stability report: Markets in the time of COVID-19: Chapter 5: Climate change: Physical risk and equity prices International Monetary Fund (IMF), 2020

Disasters as a result of climate change are projected to be more frequent and more severe, which could threaten financial stability. Chapter 5 looks at the impact of climate change physical risk on global equity valuations to assess this threat. The chapter shows that the impact of large disasters on equity markets, bank stocks, and non–life insurance stocks has generally been modest over the past 50 years. High levels of insurance penetration...

Themes: Climate Change; Private Sector
Hazards: Epidemic & Pandemic


*  Implementation of property level flood risk adaptation (PLFRA) measures: choices and decisions Wiley Interdisciplinary Reviews Water (Wiley) (WIREs)

Effective response requires effective risk management concepts and strategies at individual and watershed level to increase community resilience. Focusing on flood risk and the information associated with it, individual risk behaviour in the shape of implementing propertylevel flood risk adaptation (PLFRA) measures is often overlooked. For this research, a comprehensive overview of possible PLFRA measures for homeowners in flood risk areas was...

Themes: Disaster Risk Management; Social Impacts & Social Resilience
Hazards: Flood


*  Infiltration efficiency and subsurface water processes of a sustainable drainage system and consequences to flood management Journal of Flood Risk Management (Wiley), 2020

With increased intensity rainfall events globally and urban expansion decreasing permeable surfaces, there is an increasing problem of urban flooding. This study aims to better understand rainfall infiltration into a Sustainable Drainage System (SuDS) permeable pavement, compared with an adjacent Green Area of made ground, in relationship to groundwater levels below both areas. Results showed that average infiltration rates of the SuDS (1,925...

Themes: Science and Technology; Urban Risk & Planning; Water
Hazards: Flood


*  Integrated responses to building climate and pandemic resilience in Africa Africa Adaptation Initiative (AAI); Global Center on Adaptation (GCA), 2020

This policy brief recommends focusing stimulus investment on resilient infrastructure and food security to overcome the COVID-climate crisis. The authors propose a set of policy recommendations (p. 13) that bring multiple benefits, a “triple dividend”, to African countries. The first dividend is reduced pandemic risk. The second is climate resilience and the third is strengthened economic recover.

Themes: Climate Change
Hazards: Epidemic & Pandemic


*  National earthquake research programme (UDAP) success stories Ministry of Interior, Disaster and Emergency Management Authority (AFAD), Turkey - gov, 2020

The aim of the National Earthquake Research Programme (UDAP) in Turkey is to ensure the efficient use of the resources of the country by the projects of which outcomes meet the needs and transfer into the implementation. The programme supports studies conducted in accordance with scientific principles and ethical rules in order to produce information, make scientific comments or solve technological problems. This booklet presents the projects that...

Themes: Disaster Risk Management
Hazards: Earthquake


*  National platforms for Disaster Risk Reduction: UNDRR regional office for Europe and Central Asia overview United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction - Regional Office for Europe (UNDRR ROE); United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction - Sub-Regional Office for Central Asia (UNDRR SRO CASC), 2020

The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction stresses the need for better governance of risk, in which the state has the primary role in reducing disaster risk. Building resilience to disasters also brings together the responsibilities of many sectors, stakeholders, and levels of governance. By ensuring effective coordination of Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR) at national level, national platforms play an instrumental role in ensuring an all-of-government...

Themes: Disaster Risk Management; Governance


*  Policy alignment to advance climate-resilient development in Nepal: Opportunities and way forward National Adaptation Plan Global Network; Nepal - government, 2020

This policy discussion paper looks into the existing key policy processes that include Sustainable Development Goals, National Development Goals and Periodic Plans, Climate Change Policy, Nationally Determined Contributions and Disaster Risk Reduction and line ministry policies and explores the entry points along with critical steps to forward the policy alignment notion for climate-resilient development in Nepal. It assesses the existing and...

Themes: Climate Change; Governance


*  Preparedness and preventive behaviors for a pandemic disaster caused by COVID-19 in Serbia International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (MDPI) (IJERPH), 2020

This paper presents the results of quantitative research regarding the level of citizen preparedness for disasters caused by coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Serbia. The questionnaire examined citizens’ basic socio-economic and demographic characteristics, their knowledge, preparedness, risk perception and preventive measures taken individually and as a community to prevent the death and widespread transmission of novel coronavirus disease...

Themes: Disaster Risk Management; Social Impacts & Social Resilience
Hazards: Epidemic & Pandemic


*  Rapid review of physical distancing and alternative disease control measures in South Asia IDinsight; United Kingdom - government, 2020

The rapid review (and the policy brief) provides an overview of the physical distancing measures that have been implemented in South Asian countries to date and recommendations on approaches that can be employed to prevent the spread of COVID-19, with a specific set of recommendations for India. This briefing paper was commissioned by the South Asia Research Hub in collaboration with DFID’s Research and Evidence Department’s Science Cell...

Themes: Disaster Risk Management
Hazards: Epidemic & Pandemic


*  Scaling local and community-based adaptation Global Center on Adaptation (GCA), 2020

This paper makes a case for local actions and community-based adaptation (CBA) by showing what adaptation success looks like at the local and community level. It recognizes that successful adaptation is process-driven and requires longer-term engagement along a full spectrum of actions, including visioning, planning, implementation, monitoring, evaluation, and learning. This paper identifies key enablers and barriers for successful adaptation actions...

Themes: Climate Change; Community-based DRR; Governance


*  The impact of COVID-19 and strategies for mitigation and suppression in low- and middle-income countries American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), 2020

The results presented here illustrate the potential impact of the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic in low-income countries (LICs) and low-middle-income countries (LMICs) compared to the epidemics that have occurred to date in upper-middle-income countries (UMICs) and high-income countries (HICs). This study's results highlight the difficult decisions countries are faced within the coming weeks and months irrespective of region or income...

Themes: Disaster Risk Management
Hazards: Epidemic & Pandemic


*  The Philippines - Impact of early warning early action: Exploring the interplay between El Niño-induced drought, conflict and gender Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations - Headquarters (FAO), 2020

This study analyses the outcome of acting early on the island of Mindanao in the Philippines between 2018 and 2019, ahead of an El Niñoinduced drought. It evaluates the effectiveness of anticipatory actions and highlights families perspectives on the benefits of acting early. The lessons learned presented in this study, are (pp. 22-23): Early Warning Early Action (EWEA) systems must build on existing Disaster Risk Reduction...

Themes: Early Warning; Food Security & Agriculture; Fragility and conflict; Gender
Hazards: Drought


*  The predictive capacity of air travel patterns during the global spread of the COVID-19 pandemic: risk, uncertainty and randomness International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health (MDPI) (IJERPH), 2020

Air travel has a decisive role in the spread of infectious diseases at the global level. The authors present a methodology applied during the early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic that uses detailed aviation data at the final destination level in order to measure the risk of the disease spreading outside China. The approach proved to be successful in terms of identifying countries with a high risk of infected travellers and as a tool to monitor the...

Themes: Health & Health Facilities; Risk Identification & Assessment
Hazards: Epidemic & Pandemic


*  The projected impacts of climate change on food security in the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) Institute of Development Studies (IDS), 2020

Middle East and North Africa (MENA) region is already highly dependent on food imports, making it also vulnerable to price shocks on the global markets and harvest failures in other world regions. This rapid review focuses on literature discussing the impact of climate change on food security, in terms of future water use and food import changes, for the region as a whole. Peer-reviewed literature shows that the region will continue to be affected...

Themes: Climate Change; Food Security & Agriculture; Water


*  Training module on cyclone risk management Gujarat Institute of Disaster Management (GIDM), 2020

The Regional Climate Models (RCMs) predict an augmentation in the intensity of cyclonic activity, which has been evident recently. The Year 2019 recorded one of the most active cyclone seasons for Gujarat as six cyclonic activities were observed in the Arabian Sea out of which four cyclones were of intensity “Very Severe Cyclonic Storm” and above. It is imperative to mainstream cyclone risk reduction in developmental planning and to adopt...

Themes: Capacity Development; Climate Change; Community-based DRR; Disaster Risk Management; Early Warning; Risk Identification & Assessment; Science and Technology
Hazards: Cyclone


*  Training module on urban risk reduction and resilience Gujarat Institute of Disaster Management (GIDM), 2019

The training module on Urban Risk Reduction and Resilience focuses on various aspects of disaster risks in urban areas. Factors like the concentration of population, economic activities, building activities and networks in urban areas result in aggravated risk from disasters and at times, these factors end up causing disasters as well. The module is designed to provide a common platform of knowledge for urban development professionals and disaster...

Themes: Capacity Development; Risk Identification & Assessment; Social Impacts & Social Resilience; Urban Risk & Planning
Hazards: Cyclone; Earthquake; Flood; Heat Wave


*  Training module: Understanding disaster risk management Gujarat Institute of Disaster Management (GIDM)

This particular training manual explains the various controllers of disaster risk and elaborates on how they are related to each other. Care has been taken to explain these crucial parameters as lucidly as possible. Starting from the fundamentals, the module builds upon and gradually talks about the different aspects of disaster risk management. In addition to this, national and international arrangements are been discussed like the relevant statutes...

Themes: Capacity Development; Disaster Risk Management
Hazards: Earthquake; Flood; Heat Wave


*  When does response end and recovery begin? Exploring preparation and planning to support community’s resilient recovery National Centre for Resilience (University of Glasgow), 2020

This research project explores areas in which resilience practitioners’ (RPs) and emergency responders’ (ERs) can influence on a community during a Natural Hazzard Emergency (NHE), and how this affects a community’s capacity to recover. This is important because a community’s ability to effectively recover from impacts of an NHE has implications for that community’s future resilience, and its ability to adapt to the effects...

Themes: Disaster Risk Management; Recovery; Social Impacts & Social Resilience



View the full disaster risk reduction documents and publications collection: https://www.preventionweb.net/english/professional/publications/


JOIN the conversation on Race & Equity on 6/24


Earlier this month, following the murder of George Floyd, ASBC convened an online conversation about the role business must play in confronting racism with more than 150 leaders. On June 24 at 2 p.m. we will reconvene as a Race & Equity working group to continue that conversation. Please join us in that conversation to develop and advocate for policies and other actions to drive us toward a more just and equitable economy and society.



African Coalition. World Refugee Day. Migration is not a crime.


African Coalition echoes the statement that ‘Migration is not a crime’



We recognize those migrants, fleeing from natural and man-made disasters, also risk their lives to make their way to all over the world.

June 20th is World Refugee Day. Please join us for our World Refugee Day Forum where we will recognize and celebrate the lives of refugees and those dedicated to helping them. 


Meeting details:

Topic: World Refugee Day Panel Discussion
Time: Jun 20, 2020 11:00 AM Pacific Time (US and Canada)

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Password: 8Rmujw
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