Sendai Framework
Sendai Framework
Sendai Framework
SEA Assignment
The Sendai document emerged from three years' of talks, assisted by the United Nations
International Strategy for Disaster Reduction, during which UN member states, NGOs, and
other stakeholders made calls for an improved version of the existing Hyogo Framework,
with a set of common standards, a comprehensive framework with achievable targets, and a
legally-based instrument for disaster risk reduction. Member states also emphasized the
need to tackle disaster risk reduction and climate change adaption when setting the
Sustainable Development Goals, particularly in light of an insufficient focus on risk reduction
and resilience in the original Millennium Development Goals.
The Sendai Framework was the first international agreement adopted within the context of
the post- 2015 development agenda. Two other major international agreements followed it
in the same year: the Sustainable Development Goals 2015 – 2030 in September, and the
UNCOP21 Climate Change agreement to combat human-induced climate change in
December. DRR is a common theme in these three global agreements. The Paris Agreement
on global climate change points to the importance of averting, minimizing, and addressing
loss and damage associated with the adverse effects of climate change, including extreme
weather events and slow onset events, and the role of sustainable development in reducing
the risk of loss and damage. These three agreements recognize the desired outcomes in DRR
as a product of complex and interconnected social and economic processes, which overlap
across the agendas of the three agreements. Intrinsic to sustainable National Disaster
Management Plan development is DRR and the building of resilience to disasters. Further,
effective disaster risk management contributes to sustainable development.
To support the assessment of global progress in achieving the outcome and goal of the
Sendai Framework, seven global targets have been agreed:
1. Substantially reduce global disaster mortality by 2030, aiming to lower average per
100,000 global mortality between 2020-2030 compared to 2005-2015;
2. Substantially reduce the number of affected people globally by 2030, aiming to
lower the average global figure per 100,000 between 2020-2030 compared to 2005-
2015;
3. Reduce direct disaster economic loss in relation to global gross domestic product by
2030;
4. Substantially reduce disaster damage to critical infrastructure and disruption of basic
services, among them health and educational facilities, including through developing
their resilience by 2030;
5. Substantially increase the number of countries with national and local disaster risk
reduction strategies by 2020;
6. Substantially enhance international cooperation to developing countries through
adequate and sustainable support to complement their national actions for
implementation of the framework by 2030;
7. Substantially increase the availability of and access to multi-hazard early warning
systems and disaster risk information and assessments to the people by 2030.
On 1 June 2016, India released its first ever National Disaster Management Plan, a
document based on the global blueprint for reducing disaster losses, the Sendai Framework
for Disaster Risk Reduction. The plan aims to make India disaster resilient and significantly
reduce the loss of lives and assets.
India became the first country to produce a national plan and local strategy aimed at
lowering the losses incurred due to natural disasters. The plan was presented at the UN
2017 Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR) meeting being held in Cancun, Mexico.