Disaster Management in India Past, Present and Future
Disaster Management in India Past, Present and Future
Disaster Management in India Past, Present and Future
India
Past, Present
and
Future
N. Vinod Chandra Menon
Member,
National Disaster Management Authority
(NDMA)
Government of India
Disasters in India
Moving away from the Great Bengal famine
of 1769-1770 in which a third of the
population perished.
The Chalisa famine of 1783, the Doji Bara or
Skull famine of 1790 to 1792, the North
West Provinces famine of 1838, the North
West India Famine of 1861, the Bengal and
Orissa famine of 1866, the Rajputana famine
of 1869, the famine of 1899 to 1901, the
Bengal famine of 1943
The drought years of 1965, 1972, 1979,
1987, 2002
Areas of Concern
Activating an Early Warning System
network and its close monitoring
Mechanisms for integrating the scientific,
technological and administrative agencies
for effective disaster management
Terrestrial communication links which
collapse in the event of a rapid onset
disaster
Vulnerability of critical infrastructures
(power supply, communication, water
supply, transport, etc.) to disaster events
Areas of Concern
Funding : Primacy of relief as disaster
response.
Preparedness and Mitigation very often ignored.
Lack of integrated efforts to collect and compile
data, information and local knowledge on
disaster history and traditional response
patterns.
Need for standardised efforts in compiling and
interpreting geo-spatial data, satellite imagery
and early warning signals.
Weak areas continue to be forecasting,
modelling, risk prediction, simulation and
scenario analysis, etc.
Areas of Concern
1.
Dynamics of Disasters
There is a high probability of a low
probability event happening somewhere
sometime soon
The unpredictability of disaster events and
the high risk and vulnerability profiles
make it imperative to strengthen disaster
preparedness, mitigation and enforcement
of guidelines, building codes and
restrictions on construction of buildings in
flood-prone areas and storm surge prone
coastal areas.
Lessons Learnt
Be
Future Directions
Encourage and consolidate knowledge
networks
Mobilise and train disaster volunteers for
more effective preparedness, mitigation and
response (NSS, NCC, Scouts and Guides,
NYK, Civil Defence, Homeguards)
Increased capacity building leads to faster
vulnerability reduction.
Learn from best practices in disaster
preparedness, mitigation and disaster
response
Future Directions
Invest in Preparedness
Investments
in Preparedness and
Prevention (Mitigation) will yield
sustainable results, rather than spending
money on relief after a disaster.
Most disasters are predictable, especially
in their seasonality and the disaster-prone
areas which are vulnerable.
Communities must be involved in disaster
preparedness.
Best Practices
On 12 November, 1970 a major cyclone hit
the coastal belt of Bangladesh at 223 km/hr.
with a storm surge of six to nine meters
height, killing an estimated 500,000 people.
Due to the Cyclone Preparedness Program,
the April 1991 cyclone with wind speed of 225
km/hr. killed only 138,000 people even
though the coastal population had doubled by
that time.
In May 1994, in a similar cyclone with a wind
speed of 250 km/hr. only 127 people lost their
lives.
In May 1997, in a cyclone with wind speed of
200 km/hr. only 111 people lost their lives.
New possibilities
National Urban Renewal Mission for 70
cities: recent experience of
unprecedented extreme weather
conditions in a few major metros and
megacities
100,000 Rural Knowledge Centres
( IT Kiosks): Need for Spatial eGovernance for informed decision making
in disaster-prone areas: before, during
and after disasters
NBSSLUP
BMTPC
SOI
NRSA
NIC
GoI
Ministries
Dept. of Space
NDMA
PSUs
Census
of India
NATMO
IMD
CGWB
CWC
NSDI
Spatial Information
Electronic Clearing House
FSI
BSI
PRIs
URBAN
BODIES
Private Sector
NNRMS
NRDMS
GSI
NGOs
Knowledge Networking
Academic
& Research
Institutions
ISRO
CPCB