organization: undp country: maldives budget: usd 307,625 haa alifu haa dhaalu shaviyani noonu raa...
TRANSCRIPT
Organization: UNDP Country: MaldivesBudget: USD 307,625
Haa Alifu
Haa Dhaalu
Shaviyani
Noonu
Raa
Baa
Lhaviyani
Kaafu
Alifu Alifu
Alifu Dhaalu
Vaavu
Meemu
Faafu
Dhaalu
Thaa
Laamu
Seenu
Gaafu Dhaalu
Gaafu Alifu
Implementation Process (July 2008 – June 2009...)
Outputs Who Where (Pilot Sites)
How
Development of the Framework for Mainstreaming Disaster Risk Reduction
NDMC Nation-wide Inter’l consultant
Integration of Disaster Risk Reduction in the School Curriculum and Co-Curricular Programmes
MoE 4 schools in Male 4schools in Fuvamulah
Inter’l consultantlocal consultantProject assistants
Detailed Cost Benefit Analysis of Risk Mitigation Measures in 3 Selected Islands
MHTE Most Vulnerable 2 Islands 1 Safer Island
Inter’l consultantlocal consultant
Key Achievements 1Development of national disaster risk reduction mainstreaming framework1. MDP Manifesto Sector Plan for Disaster Risk Management
2. TOTs for Incident Command System (ICS-100)
Key Achievements 1
Key Achievements 1Upcoming Deliverables by December 2009Strategic National Action Plan (SNAP) for Disaster Risk
Reduction & Climate Change Adaptation Disaster Response Plan for Hospitals & Health Clinics Training Module of Emergency Medical Training CourseEmergency Medical Technician-Basic (EMT-B) Course Human Resource Development Plan for NDMCContingency Plan Training for NEOC
Integration of disaster risk reduction into the school curriculum and co-curricular activities
Key Achievements 2
1. 2 in-country and 1 International TOT trainings on DRR in school
2. Total of 404 teachers and curriculum developers in 19 schools trained on DRR in school (Male’ and Gn. Fuvamulah)
Key Achievements 2
3. Draft Student/ Teacher Book for DRR developed and piloted
Key Achievements 2
4. Draft Guide for School Emergency Operation and Preparedness Plan (SEOP) Maldives
Key Achievements 2
Key Achievements 2Upcoming Deliverables by December 2009Syllabus to be developed based on the results of piloting student/teacher book Draft SEOP will be finalized based on pilot planning exercises in pilot schools
Key Achievements 3Detailed cost benefit analysis of risk mitigation measures in 3 selected islands
Draft Final Report developed (To be completed by September)
COST (Construction cost of
risk mitigation measures)
BENEFIT(Expected reduction in
loss WITH risk mitigation measures)
Key Achievements 3Fixed Cost Associated with Risk Management Scenarios for Thinadhoo
Protection Type Costs Total CostNo man made protection (“without” scenario)
Rf. 0 Rf. 0
Safe Island Protection Coastal protection (north and east): 66,049,000Coastal protection (west and south): 66,049,000EPZ around island: 20,000,000Resilient harbour: 37,312,173Evacuation facilities: 3,855,000Flood mitigation for lifeline infrastructure: 2,332,500Houses & buildings retrofitted: 7,600,000Drainage in rainfall flood prone areas: 2,604,225
205,801,898
Selected Safe Island Protection
Coastal protection (north, east and south): 72,653,900EPZ around portion of island: 11,000,000Resilient harbour: 37,312,173Evacuation facilities: 3,855,000Flood mitigation for lifeline infrastructure: 2,332,500Houses & buildings retrofitted: 7,600,000Drainage in rainfall flood prone areas: 2,604,225
137,357,798
Limited protection Coastal protection (east): 49,536,750EPZ around island: 7,500,000Flood mitigation for the power house: 875,000Drainage in rainfall flood prone areas: 2,604,225
60,517,975
Key Achievements 3Estimated Loss in Thinadhoo by Hazard Magnitudes (Without Scenario)
Magnitude
Estimated Losses
Tsunami losses
Swell waves and storm surge
losses
Rainfall flooding
lossesLow
8,520,866 227,250 91,000Moderate
34,083,462 909,000 364,000Severe 85,208,655 2,272,500 910,000
[1] Note that this figure includes loss of life
Reduction in Losses in Thinadhoo (Tsunami)Protection
TypeSevere tsunami Moderate tsunami Low tsunami
Level of protection Reduction in losses
Level of protection Reduction in losses
Level of protection Reduction in losses
Safe Island Severe strength tsunami may over top and flood with a depth of 0.5m on land up to 30m, enough to cause damage to 10% of the island, but other mitigation measures will ensure damage is limited to 5%; rising water table may damage sewerage system.
90% Waves may over top and flood with a depth less than 0.5m on land up to 30m, enough to cause damage to 10% of the island, but other mitigation measures will ensure damage is limited to 3%; rising water table may damage sewerage system.
99% Full protection. 100%
Selected Safe Island
Severe strength tsunami will over top and flood with a depth of 0.5m on land, enough to cause damage to 10% of the island.
85% Waves may over top and flood with a depth less than 0.5m on land up to 30m, enough to cause damage to 10% of the island.
90% Full protection. 100%
Limited Protection
Will cause moderate damage during a maximum strength tsunami; waves will over top and flood up to 1.0m, enough to cause damage to 20% of the island without other mitigation measures.
50% Will cause severe-moderate damage during a moderate strength tsunami; waves will over top and flood less than 1.0m, enough to cause damage to 15% of the island without other mitigation measures.
75% Will cause moderate-low damage during a wave event; waves may over top around the harbour area and damage coastal infrastructure, particularly, harbour and coastal protection.
95%
Protection Type
Severe tsunami Moderate tsunami Low tsunami
Level of protection Reduction in losses
Level of protection Reduction in losses
Level of protection Reduction in losses
Safe Island Severe strength tsunami will over top and flood with a depth of 2.0m on land, enough to cause damage to 50% of the island, but other mitigation measures will ensure damage is limited to 20%; rising water table may damage sewerage system.
65% Waves above 2.5 m will over top and flood up to 0.5 m on land, enough to cause damage to 25% of the island. Lack of mitigation measures will ensure damage is limited to 5%; rising water table may damage sewerage system.
85% Full protection: 2.5 m high seawall will prevent over topping
100%
Selected Safe Island
Severe strength tsunami will over top and flood with a depth of 2.0m on land, enough to cause damage to 50% of the island.
45% Waves above 2.5 m will over top and flood up to 0.5 m on land, enough to cause damage to 25% of the island. Rising water table may damage sewerage system
70% Full protection: 2.5 m high seawall will prevent over topping
100%
Limited Protection
Will cause severe damage during a maximum strength tsunami; waves will over top and flood up to 2.5m, enough to cause damage to 60% of the island without other mitigation measures.
25% Will cause severe-moderate damage during a moderate strength tsunami; waves will over top and flood up to 1.0m, enough to cause damage to 35% of the island without other mitigation measures.
40% Will cause moderate-low damage during a wave event; waves may over top and flood up to 0.25m, which may not cause much damage on land but will affect some coastal infrastructure, particularly coastal protection.
80%
Reduction in Losses in Villingiri (Tsunami)
- BCR>1: Benefit (Reduction in Losses) > Cost
Islands Protection Type Maximum Hazard BCR Minimum Hazard BCR
Thinadhoo Safer Island Protection 1.40 0.39
Selected Safe Island Protection 1.85 0.52
Limited Protection 3.65 1.13
Villingiri Safer Island Protection 1.00 0.28
Selected Safe Island Protection 0.96 0.29
Limited Protection 1.33 0.42
Vilfushi Safer Island Protection 1.95 0.50
Key Achievements 3
Mixed Results: Efficiency of Risk Mitigation Measures
Benefit Cost Ratio (BCR) = Benefit (Reduction in Losses)/ Cost
- BCR<1: Benefit (Reduction in Losses) < Cost
Key Achievements 3
Recommendations and Next Steps: Effective early earning system at all levels Develop DRR guideline for settlement planning, building
code and land reclamation Conduct further research into viable alternative
protection measures Establish capacity and financing climate monitoring &
research
Ideas for developing the motivation and ownership Certificates of local and international trainings Exposures to the examples in model school in the Philippines
Assistance to the voluntary initiative Preparation of training materials for trained teachers – modules,
videos Coordination with head teachers/ stakeholders so that teacher can
conduct training easily
Employment of national and international consultants Local consultant – Provision of expertise and experience on
curriculum development in Maldives International consultant – Provision of expertise and experience on
Disaster Risk Management
Lessons Learned -What worked -
Total of 404 teachers and curriculum developers trained on DRR in school by June 2009 (Target: 40 )
Lessons Learned - What did not work -
Dependency on external consultants It requires obtaining services from internationals, which is time
consuming. Disaster risk reduction is a new field in the Maldives. To ensure quality of project activities, views and input from mostly external experts are required other than what is available internally (i.e. the Ministry concerned). Once we had the consultants and specialists on-board, the process then rolled as planned.
Shortage of governmental staff with expertise Focal points in the implementing partners are simultaneously
burdened with many other tasks. Deployment of project assistant for UNDP projects in implementing partners speeded up the implementation
Project implementation was behind schedule and coordination was not organized in the initial stage
How the outcomes will be sustained…
Registration and Utilization of Trained Trainers
Using Established Functioning SystemDRR into all existing school subjects
Synergy Effect for SNAP
Future Plans??Outputs Time Frame Activities
Detailed Cost Benefit Analysis of Risk Mitigation Measures
2010 – 2011 Editing/ Publication CBA in Most Vulnerable 7 Islands
Development of the Framework for Mainstreaming Disaster Risk Reduction
2010 – 2012 National Disaster Management PlanEstablishment of National/Atoll Emergency Operation CentreEnhancement of MDRNMulti-hazards Contingency PlanSimulation ExercisesBuilding Code and Act incorporating climate risk
Integration of Disaster Risk Reduction in the School Curriculum and Co-Curricular Programmes
2010 – 2011 Publication of Student/ Teacher BookDevelopment of syllabus for teacher training in faculty of educationTOT for School Drill based on SEOP
SNAP National Forum (Tentative)
Date: September 30th, 2009Venue: Male, MaldivesParticipants: ISDR, UNDP, Bi and Multi-
lateral Donors Expected Outcomes:
Priority of tangible projects and programmesJoint risk reduction work plan (Resource &
Time)
Shukuriya!