Lew ShortPrincipal, Emergency Management & Resilience
Challenges of Resilience in Emergency Management
Office of Environment & HeritageSydney Metropolitan Area Integrated Regional Vulnerability Assessment
Emergency Management Workshop 4th December 2013
My Role Today• Give us a Sydney perspective and challenge
participants to understand that climate change is real, happening and urgent with a silo-busting approach.
“Poke the bear…”
“The world has entered the era of ‘mega crisis’
or catastrophic emergencies’ whose force
and magnitude defy even the best laid plans
and the most robust response systems”
Professor Paul ‘t Hart
Emergency Management policy is getting more complex
• People expect information as it arrives
• Previous good responses may have created a culture
of immediacy in the community
• Peoples ability to make appropriate decisions under
stress is limited
• Peoples ability to understand their risk and act on
this in an informed way is limited
Australia vulnerable in a warming planet, IPCC Report
• Climate change will increase the likelihood of deaths from heat stress and bushfires, and potentially place more than a quarter of a million Australian homes at risk from rising sea levels.
• Cities such as Sydney will see heat-related deaths soar by the end of the century, the draft said.
• Without adaptation, heat-related deaths could triple to 7.4 per 100,000 in 2070-99, from 2.5 in 1960-99.
• Mental health issues, water- and food-borne diseases will increase under global warming projections.
• Floods may also worsen. One study found that 50-year and 100-year flood peaks will rise 10-20 per cent by 2050, the draft document noted.
http://www.smh.com.au/environment/climate-change/australia-vulnerable-in-a-warming-planet-leaked-ipcc-report-finds-20131014-2vhz0.html#ixzz2hjYJlYc1
http://www.emknowledge.gov.au/search/?search=sydney®ion=
Most expensive
http://www.riskfrontiers.com/pdf/McAneney-Market-based-mechanisms-for-climate-change-adaptation.pdf
Black Saturday Feb 2009 The commission's final report estimates the cost at $4.4 billionhttp://www.theage.com.au/victoria/black-saturday-cost-44-billion-20100801-11116.html#ixzz2hjafslNA
Blue Mountains bush fires $183m
?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_disasters_in_Australia_by_death_toll
Cyclone Tracey 74 deaths
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_disasters_in_Australia_by_death_toll
Cyclone Tracey 74 deaths
Is resilience and adaptation limited
by our past experience and
imagination?
• Israel’s survival is due to the Mossad policy of the “10th Man”:
• For every potential threat, one out of 10 people in the agency assigned to the case needs to take it seriously, no matter how far-fetched it may seem.
World War Z
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Potential:• Loss of radio & telco towers• Loss of situational awareness
Capacity of community to receive and act on triggers
Future Resilience Challenges• More frequent & intense natural disasters (longer & deeper droughts, more
frequent & intense bushfires, heatwaves, more costly storms & floods); • There will be more of us (around 25 million in 2020) & aged population;• Catastrophic events will overwhelm emergency services & government will
not be able to meet the response phase of an event;• The community will continue to be first responders (ie they will be the first
on scene and will begin to assist) and will self mobilise (social media i.e. “Tassie Fires We can Help” (http://www.tassiefireswecanhelp.com) and “Cyclone Yasi Update” (http://tiny.cc/z0rm4w);
• Natural disasters will cost us a lot (around $12 billion by 2030) • Insurers will be price signalling to reflect risk & exposure;• Harmonising landuse planning and building codes on an all hazards, all
agency basis that is consistent across the country;• Expectations of the community will be for no loss of life, real time
information and warnings;• We will be network centric;• More warnings and evacuations
Code based Resilience • Buildings and infrastructure must have the resilience to
accommodate climate change .• The Insurance Council of Australia, in a recent submission to
the Productivity Commission, outlined that the National Code of Construction – “permits the construction of buildings (at a minimum standard) that
include no element of durability (property protection), creating a stock of buildings that whilst ‘safe’ are increasingly brittle to extreme weather events”.
• Under current code objectives — health, safety, amenity and sustainability — buildings are primarily designed and built to reduce risks to human life, rather than to minimise damage to the building.
• National Code of Construction is not applicable to existing buildings, which form the majority of the building stock… retrofitting?
Insured V Non- Insured• An interesting policy dilemma may be shaping up
regarding peoples actions during bushfires• Fully insured residents were the least likely (23%) to stay
and defend their properties, with 45% of underinsured and 38% of uninsured saying they would do so. Many NSW bushfire victims lack full cover http://insurancenews.com.au/local/many-nsw-bushfire-victims-lack-full-cover
• At face value it seems those that are at risk of financial hardship are taking a more risky path to stay & defend their property.
• While there are not mandatory evacuations in many jurisdictions it presents a series of issues, linked in part by peoples socio-economic means to have insurance – Vic “pecuniary interest in a property”
Coonabarabran, Yass and Shoalhaven1.4 million hectares burned, 62 homes destroyed and 50,000 stock
Out of Scale Events• Profound changes in the way we consume information• How does government deal with non government in a
disaster?• Why are more people turning to NGO in disaster?
Speed, capability & nimbleness issues? Maybe constraint issues? D. Kaufman FEMA
• Big events expose the vulnerability of government– Hurricane Sandy 25,000 people seeking shelter– 18m people without power– 100m Americans experienced the storm– 118 deaths
The 10th Man• What happens when out of scale events or a
series of concurrent events within NSW or around the country stretch resources beyond their capacity & capability– Loss of situational awareness– Surge capability– Society breakdown??
Sydney Basin drained of fire
fighting resources and sent to the
Mountains
• What if fires had been burning in northern or southern Sydney OR started in these places when the resources were away?
Winmalee http://www.abc.net.au/news/2013-10-26/nswfire-warnings-disaster-relief-winmalee-meeting-bushfires/5047638
Challenge: How to make information accessible• In a way that provokes a
response• Gives greater
understanding of risk• Initiates action and
adaptation• Builds capacity• Enhances resilience
• & is not based on emergency services
EM Challenges• Catastrophic & out of scale events• Ability to manage large scale asymmetric events• Situational awareness in complex environments• Loss of situational awareness• Coordinated operations & integrated doctrine• Communications & information management• Social media & first responders• Surge capability• Partnerships with NGO & private sector• All hazards, all agencyFramed in consideration of climate change, resilience and out of scale events
• Technical responses are relatively easy• Adaptive management & leadership is hard• A process of understanding, exchanging information,
working together and learning is needed. • This is an uneasy process. People don’t adapt easily.
They deny the problem, they resist the pain that is needed to deal with the situation, they avoid the work to be done. That’s where leadership is needed.
• Leadership is putting the finger on the real challenges that threaten our survival and changing the mindset of the many.
Adaptive Leadership
Lew ShortPrincipal, Emergency Management & ResilienceEco Logical Australia0419 203 853
Lew Short Lewshort14http://www.slideshare.net/LewShort
Thanks
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