Multi-Risk Assessment and Management—A Comparative Study of the Current State of Affairs in Chile and Ecuador
Abstract
:1. Introduction
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- Global target A: “Substantially reduce global disaster mortality by 2030, aiming to lower average per 100,000 global mortality between 2020–2030 compared with 2005–2015.”
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- Global target B: “Substantially reduce the number of affected people globally by 2030, aiming to lower the average global figure per 100,000 between 2020–2030 compared with 2005–2015.”
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- Global target C: “Reduce direct disaster economic loss in relation to global gross domestic product (GDP) by 2030.”
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- Global target D: “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.”
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- Global target E: “Substantially increase the number of countries with national and local disaster risk reduction strategies by 2020.”
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- Global target F: “Substantially enhance international cooperation to developing countries through adequate and sustainable support to complement their national actions for implementation of this framework by 2030.”
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- Global target G: “Substantially increase the availability of and access to multi-hazard early warning systems and disaster risk information and assessments to the people by 2030.”
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- What are the root causes of vulnerability and risk in Chile and Ecuador?
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- How do these two Latin American countries perform in regard to the aforementioned global output targets E and G?
2. State of the Art in Multi-Risk Assessment and Management
3. Methods
- E-1: Number of countries that adopt and implement national disaster risk reduction strategies in line with the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (DDR) 2015–2030:
- ○
- Did Chile and Ecuador adopt national strategies?
- E-2: Percentage of local governments that adopt and implement local disaster risk reduction strategies in line with national strategies:
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- Have Chilean and Ecuadorian cities adopted local DRR strategies? Are the output targets A–D addressed by these strategies and if yes, how?
- G-2: Number of countries that have multi-hazard monitoring and forecasting systems.
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- Do Chile and Ecuador have such a system in place?
- G-3: Number of people per 100,000 that are covered by early warning information through local governments or through national dissemination mechanisms.
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- What is the diffusion rate of early warning systems in Chile and Ecuador? For which hazards are these systems established?
- G-4: Percentage of local governments having a plan to act on early warnings.
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- To what extent do emergency management plans exist at the local level in Chile and Ecuador? Do they include preparedness and response strategies based on early warnings?
- G-5: Number of countries that have accessible, understandable, usable and relevant disaster risk information and assessment available to the people at the national and local levels.
- ○
- Is this kind of information available in Chile and Ecuador on the national level? Does an evidence basis for multi-risk assessment exist at the local level?
- G-6: Percentage of population exposed to or at risk from disasters protected through pre-emptive evacuation following early warning.
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- Have evacuations been effectively used in Chile and Ecuador? If yes, for which types of events?
4. Case Studies
4.1. Chile
4.2. Ecuador
5. Results
- Incorporating disaster risk management into national and local planning.
- Promoting of the “Law of the Organic Code of State Security” and its chapter “Decentralized national system of risk management”.
- Controlling the accountability of the Ecuadorian Construction Standard (NEC).
- Building financial mechanisms for disaster risk management.
- Agreeing to public-private actions for disaster risk management.
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- 41.8% of the municipalities have a Community Plan for Civil Protection and Emergencies in force,
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- 31.2% consider aspects related to disaster risk management in their respective Community Regulatory Plans,
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- 24.9% declare that they have a specific management plan for disaster and emergency risk reduction,
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- 48.3% have an exclusive budget to carry out actions in disaster and emergency risk management.
- “Cantonal Emergency Plans” (CEP); mainly response plans.
- “Risk Reduction Agendas” (RRA); focused on transport infrastructure (sea and river ports, bridges, roads, land terminals) and water (water sources).
- “Risk Management Units” (UGR); mainly preventive, created by municipal decree and if existing, with multiple constitutional and financial allocation variation.
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- The Hydrographic and Oceanographic Service of the Navy (SHOA) monitors the risk of tsunami.
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- The National Seismological Center monitors earthquakes.
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- The National Service of Geology and Mining (SERNAGEOMIN) monitors geological and volcanic risks.
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- National Forestry Corporation (CONAF, Santiago, Chile) monitors the risk of forest fires.
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- The Chilean Meteorological Directorate monitors and forecasts all weather events at national level.
6. Discussion
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
AMUCH | Chilean Association of Municipalities |
CAT | Early Warning Center |
CEP | Cantonal Emergency Plan |
CIIFEN | International Center for Research on the El Niño Phenomenon |
COOTAD | Organic Code of Territorial Organization, Autonomy and Decentralization |
DMQ | Metropolitan District of Quito |
DRM | Disaster risk management |
DRR | Disaster risk reduction |
GAD | Administrative levels of Ecuador |
GADM | Local administrative level of Ecuador |
IGEPN | Geophysical Institute of the National Polytechnic School |
IIGE | Geological and Energy Research Institute |
INAMHI | National Institute of Meteorology and Hydrology |
INOCAR | Oceanographic Institute of the Navy |
LOOTUGS | Organic Law on Land-Use and Management |
ONEMI | National Emergency Office |
PDOT | Development and Territorial Planning Plan |
PEEGRD | Specific Strategic Plan for Disaster Risk Management 2019–2030 |
PENGRD | National Strategic Plan for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2018 |
RRA | Risk Reduction Agenda |
PNGRD | National Policy for Disaster Risk Reduction |
SDG | Sustainable Development Goal |
SNGRE | National Service for Risk and Emergency Management |
SNI | National Information System |
STPE | Technical Secretatiat “Planifica Ecuador” |
SUBDERE | Natural Hazard Analysis Guide for Land-Use Planning |
UGR | Risk Management Unit |
UN-ISDR | United Nations International Strategy for Disaster Risk Reduction |
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Issue | Chile | Ecuador |
---|---|---|
General | ||
Past disasters | Earthquakes and tsunamis with greatest damage, furthermore, droughts, intense rainfall, floods and landslides | Seismic (earthquake, tsunami), volcanic, heavy rainfall and drought, landslides; multi-hazard events |
Population, total | 19.0 million (2019) | 17.4 million (2019) |
Urban population (% of total population) | 88% (2019) | 64% (2019) |
Urban population growth (annual %) | 1.27% (2019) | 1.93% (2019) |
Informal settlements | 741 informal settlements, populated by 43,000 families (2018) | 88% of municipalities with informal settlements with 2.9 million inhabitants (20% of population) |
Indicator | Chile | Ecuador |
---|---|---|
Indicator E-1: Did Chile and Ecuador adopt national disaster risk reduction strategies in line with the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030? | Adopted national disaster risk reduction strategy. Official version is not in line with the Sendai Framework, but new, already internally used version will be adopted soon. | Adopted national disaster risk reduction strategy. In line with the Sendai Framework. |
Indicator E-2: Percentage of local governments that adopt and implement local disaster risk reduction strategies in line with national strategies. | A considerable amount of local governments (about 40%) adopted and implemented local disaster risk reduction strategies. Not linked to Sendai targets. | Exact numbers not available. Not linked to Sendai targets. |
Indicator G-2: Do Chile and Ecuador have multi-hazard monitoring and forecasting systems in place? | Extensive hazard monitoring and forecasting systems exist, but only related to various single hazards (managed by various different authorities). | Extensive hazard monitoring and forecasting systems exist, but only related to various single hazards (managed by various different authorities). |
Indicator G-3: Number of people per 100,000 that are covered by early warning information through local governments or through national dissemination mechanisms. | 25% of the population has a comprehensive early warning center which delivers information through the mobile phone network. | No quantitative information available. Early warning information are delivered for different hazards by various different agencies. |
Indicator G-4: Percentage of local governments having a plan to act on early warnings. | 68% of municipalities have a Communal Emergency Plan. | 18% of all municipalities have a plan to act on the tsunami early warning system (only the regions along the coast). 3–5% of all municipalities have a plan to act on the volcanic early warning system (only the regions exposed to volcanic hazards). |
Indicator G-5: Do Chile and Ecuador have accessible, understandable, usable and relevant disaster risk information and assessment available to the people at the national and local levels? | Systematic information is openly available. | Accessible, understandable, usable and relevant information available. Most of the data on threats is not open access. |
Indicator G-6: Percentage of population exposed to or at risk from disasters protected through pre-emptive evacuation following early warning. | No quantitative information available. | No quantitative information available. |
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Share and Cite
Greiving, S.; Schödl, L.; Gaudry, K.-H.; Quintana Miralles, I.K.; Prado Larraín, B.; Fleischhauer, M.; Jácome Guerra, M.M.; Tobar, J. Multi-Risk Assessment and Management—A Comparative Study of the Current State of Affairs in Chile and Ecuador. Sustainability 2021, 13, 1366. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031366
Greiving S, Schödl L, Gaudry K-H, Quintana Miralles IK, Prado Larraín B, Fleischhauer M, Jácome Guerra MM, Tobar J. Multi-Risk Assessment and Management—A Comparative Study of the Current State of Affairs in Chile and Ecuador. Sustainability. 2021; 13(3):1366. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031366
Chicago/Turabian StyleGreiving, Stefan, Leonie Schödl, Karl-Heinz Gaudry, Iris Katherine Quintana Miralles, Benjamín Prado Larraín, Mark Fleischhauer, Myriam Margoth Jácome Guerra, and Jonathan Tobar. 2021. "Multi-Risk Assessment and Management—A Comparative Study of the Current State of Affairs in Chile and Ecuador" Sustainability 13, no. 3: 1366. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031366
APA StyleGreiving, S., Schödl, L., Gaudry, K. -H., Quintana Miralles, I. K., Prado Larraín, B., Fleischhauer, M., Jácome Guerra, M. M., & Tobar, J. (2021). Multi-Risk Assessment and Management—A Comparative Study of the Current State of Affairs in Chile and Ecuador. Sustainability, 13(3), 1366. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13031366