Title: Hazardous Environments
1Hazardous Environments
2Curriculum
3.1 Hazardous Environments resulting from Crustal
(tectonic) Movement
- Global distribution and the relationship of
hazards to plate tectonics (convergent,
divergent, conservative plate margins, hot
spots) - earthquakes and resultant hazards (shaking,
landslides, tsunami) - volcanic hazards types of eruption and their
products (nuées ardentés, lava flows, mudflows,
pyroclastic and ash fallout) - prediction and monitoring of hazard perception
of risk. - Effects on lives and property.
33.2 Hazardous Environments resulting from Mass
Movements
- Nature and causes of mass movements on slopes
leading to hazards that result from slope
instability, level of impact - the nature and causes of avalanches and the
hazards produced - prediction and monitoring of the hazard and the
perception of risk. - Effects on lives and property.
43.3 Hazard resulting from Atmospheric Disturbances
- Distribution of areas most at risk from tropical
storms and tornadoes - processes causing the development of tropical
storms and tornadoes - related hazards (Coastal flooding, severe river
floods, landslides, storm surges, high winds,
pressure imbalances). - Prediction, monitoring of hazards and perception
of risk. - Effects on lives and property.
53.4 Sustainable Management in Hazardous
Environments
- A case study illustrating some of the problems of
sustainable management of a hazardous environment
and an evaluation of attempted or possible
solutions.
6What Is a Hazard?
- A Hazard is an event that threatens life and/or
property.
Extreme Natural or Cultural Events
People and/or their property
HAZARD
7- Natural Hazards
- Extreme natural events that originate in the
lithosphere, the atmosphere or hydrosphere
(tectonic/geologic, surface or atmospheric) that
risk damage to people and/or property. - Cultural Hazards
- Events caused by humans technological
(explosions, contamination etc) and social
(riots, crime, terrorism) that risk damage to
people and/or property. - Disaster
- John Whittow in his book Disasters The Anatomy
of Environmental Hazards suggested that - a hazard is a perceived natural event which
threatens both life and property a disaster is
the realisation of this hazard
8- Disasters are therefore extreme events that
normally cause great loss of life and/or damage
to the built environment and create severe
disruption to human activities. - Risk Assessment
- The process of establishing the probability that
a hazard event of a particular magnitude will
occur within a given period. - Integrated Risk Management
- The process of considering the social, economic
and political factors involved in risk analysis
determining the acceptability of
damage/disruption deciding on actions to be
taken to minimise damage/disruption.
9- Vulnerability
- Is the potential for losses or other adverse
impacts. People, buildings, ecosystems and human
activities threatened with disaster are
vulnerable. - IDNDR
- (International Decade for Natural Disaster
Reduction) - Set up by United Nations in 1989 with a
multisectoral framework of action with the aim
to reduce the loss of life, property damage and
socio-economic disruption caused by natural,
technological and environmental disasters
10- IDNDR conclusions
- Recent hazards impacts have dramatically
increased (however frequency of extreme natural
events has not). - Risk has increased due to increasing cultural
exposure to extreme natural events.
Population Growth
Urbanisation
Increased Impacts of ENEs
Economic Growth
Government inability to cope
Pressure to develop marginal land
Failure to recognise potential hazards
11Common Characteristics of Natural Hazards
- Natural hazards and their effects on people tend
to have common characteristics - The origin of the hazard is clear and produces
characteristic effects. - Warning time is normally short (except for
drought) i.e. they are rapid-onset unscheduled
events. - Most loss of life and property are suffered
during or soon after the event. - The risk is involuntary (although this applies
mainly to LEDCs as most people in MEDCs are
aware of risks and choose to minimise or ignore
them) - The impact on the human population has an
intensity and scale to justify an emergency
response.
12Risk levels LEDCs vs MEDCs
- LEDC
- Large / poor populations
- Inadequate infrastructure
- Ineffectual governments
- Extreme climate
- MEDC
- Large built environment
- (greater risk of damage)
- Larger investment risk
- Highly urbanised
13Hazard Classification
- Hazards have been classified using a wide range
of criteria and approaches, and for a variety of
purposes and user groups. - Purposes of classification
- Assessing risk
- Understanding spatial patterns
- Understanding how hazards impact on people
- Aiding our understanding of processes and how
they are inter-related - Helping to manage responses to hazards
- Classification groups include
- Spatial distribution e.g. MEDC/LEDC, Continents
or climate region - Origin/causal process e.g. tectonic, atmospheric
- Impact on people e.g. levels of damage
14Hazard Frequency Magnitude(Scale)
- Hazards are commonly classified using their
frequency and magnitude. - Magnitude (size)
- most commonly seen with earthquakes (Richter and
Mercalli scales) or tropical cyclones (Beaufort
scale for wind speed Saffir-Simpson scale) - Frequency (how often they occur)
- Storms and floods are often classified using a
recurrence interval e.g. 100 year flood. This
is a probability statement not a temporal
staement. - There is a statistical relationship between
magnitude and frequency - as magnitude increases frequency decreases.
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19Saffir Simpson Scale
20Effects, Risk Perception
- Effects
- Effects can be split into environmental
cultural or primary secondary - Risk
- People put themselves at risk because
- Hazards are essentially unpredictable
- Lack of alternatives (due to social, political,
economic or cultural factors) - Changing levels of risk
- Cost/benefit (benefits outweigh the risk/cost)
- Perception
- Perception
- Fatalism (acceptance of hazard Gods will)
- Adaptation (modify lifestyle to minimise effects)
- Fear (forces people to relocate away from risk)
21Management of Hazards
- Response to hazards has shifted from just coping
to a sophisticated integrated risk management
approach. - This approach supported by the UN IDNDR
combines Prediction, Prevention Protection. - Britton (1998) defined Integrated Risk
Management as - the process of considering the social, economic
and political factors involved in risk analysis
determining the acceptability of
damage/disruption deciding on the actions to be
taken to minimise damage/disruption - This approach thus has 2 essential elements
- Risk Assessment
- Risk Communication (between all concerned)
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