International Strategy for Disaster Reduction   


Risk reduction and:
Climate change - Education - Early warning - Gender - Sustainable development
     
Disaster risk and climate change

Disaster risk reduction and adaptation to climate change

Role of ISDR in
climate change
Work programme

ISDR Working Group
on Climate Change
and Disaster Risk Reduction

Partners

ISDR Information resources

   
 

For more information contact:

Silvia Llosa
llosa[at]un.org

   
   
   
   
 
 

Disaster risk and climate change

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Uganda Flood emergency 2007. Photo by Peter Casier

Climate change is expected to increase the severity and frequency of weather-related natural hazards such as storms, high rainfalls, floods, droughts and heat-waves (IPCC Fourth Assessment Report). Coupled with sea level rise, this will lead to more disasters in future – unless prompt action is taken.

Over the period 1995-2004, a total of 2,500 million people were affected by disasters, with losses of 890,000 dead and US$ 570 billion costs. Most disasters (75%) are related to weather extremes (ISDR disaster statistics). Of particular concern is the fact that disasters have been increasing over recent decades, mainly owing to increased populations in hazard-prone locations, unplanned settlements and environmental degradation, but evidence is also mounting that climate change is a factor too, for example in more intense hurricanes, higher rainfall intensities and heat-waves.

Climate change is altering the face of disaster risk, not only through increased weather related risks and sea-level and temperature rise, but also through increases in societal vulnerabilities from stresses on water availability, agriculture and ecosystems. Disaster risk reduction and climate change mitigation and adaptation share a common space of concern: reducing the vulnerability of communities and achieving sustainable development.

ISDR and climate change

Governments have recognized the importance of coordinating climate change adaptation with relevant natural disaster risk reduction measures and the need to integrate these considerations in a comprehensive manner into development plans and poverty eradication programmes.

For several years, the ISDR secretariat has provided information and guidance on disaster risk reduction as a tool to manage climate risks and adapt to climate change, both to inform international policy deliberations and to assist governments and other parties to reduce climate-related vulnerabilities and risk, in line with the Hyogo Framework.

Key points include:

  • Use the guidance of the Hyogo Framework for Action: Building the Resilience of Nations and Communities to Disasters, agreed by 168 Governments in Kobe, Hyogo, Japan in 2005 to facilitate a systematic rather than project-based approach to adaptation to climate change.

  • Scale-up the use of existing disaster risk reduction tools that have proven to be effective in dealing with climate-related events that will be exacerbated by climate change. These include vulnerability and risk assessments, early warning systems, land-use planning and building code regulation, and institutional and legal capacities.

  • Ensure adaptation to climate change and disaster risk reduction are integrated into development planning in all sectors. Establish inter-ministerial committees and national platforms for risk reduction to ensure inter-sectorial, multistakeholder coordination.

  • Improve capacities and services for knowledge transfer from science to practice and application to bridge gaps in risk management in climate-sensitive sectors.

ISDR secretariat focuses it efforts on there areas of action:

  1. Achieve recognition, understanding and specific policies at the international level on the synergies between reducing disaster risk and responding to climate change,
  2. Mobilize, guide and facilitate action at national and regional levels to integrate disaster reduction and climate change policies and practice, and
  3. Strengthen the capacities of the ISDR system and secretariat to support the integration of disaster reduction and climate change by all actors.

Partners can support these efforts through participation in the ISDR Working Group on Climate Change and Disaster Risk Reduction.

 

              

           

  

 

 
NEWS
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During the UNFCCC Bangkok Climate Change Talks 2008 Parties advanced the Bali Road Map and decided on the Development of a work programme. To improve understanding of elements of the Bali Action Plan, Parties requested workshops to be held. Among those planned is a workshop on "Risk management and risk reduction strategies, including risk sharing and transfer mechanisms such as insurance”.

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Disaster risk reduction is a key element of the Bali Action Plan 
The main outcome document of the UNFCCC 13th Conference of the Parties, the Bali Action Plan, sets the path toward a new international climate change agreement.
The secretariat is supporting countries in implementing the Bali Action Plan.
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ISDR flyer on disaster risk and climate change on implementing the Bali Action Plan.

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Call for good practices on gender, disaster risk reduction and climate change
The UN/ISDR secretariat in collaboration with IUCN and WEDO issued in Bali a call for good practices and lessons learned that link disaster risk reduction as a key tool for reducing the impact of climate change, with a gender perspective.
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Climate Change and Disaster Risks, ISDR Recommendations for Action Now and Post-2012.

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UN/ISDR side event at UNFCCC COP-13: Adaptation post-2012: reducing vulnerability and risk. For more information see ENB special report or visit UNFCCC web cast of the side event.

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Media training of the Asia-Pacific Broadasting Union (ABU) with UN/ISDR and UNEP hold a workshop for journalists at UNFCCC COP-13 on climate change and disasters. (Agenda)
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The IPCC Synthesis Report summarizing the full Fourth Assessment Report.
The Working Group II contribution to the Forth Assessment Report of the IPCC - Climate Change 2007: Impacts, Adaptation and Vulnerability - includes links with disaster risk reduction. 

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The ISDR request for further scientific assessment by IPCC on managing the risk of extreme events to advance climate change adaptation.

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The Future in our Hands: Addressing the Leadership Challenge of Climate Change.
The UN Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon met world leaders from more than 150 countries on 24 September at UN Headquarters in New York to secure commitment and build momentum for the UN Climate Change Conference in Bali. For further information: Chairs summary or Background paper
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The Human Development Report 2007/2008: "Fighting Climate Change: Human Solidarity in a Divided World" is now online available.
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Meeting and conferences
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9-10 April
28th session of the IPCC. Budapest, Hungary.
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10-13 May 2008
International GEF Workshop on Evaluating Climate Change and Development: Results, Methods and Capacities. Alexandria, Egypt.
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19-30 May 2008
CBD COP-9
. Bonn, Germany
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24-26 May
G8 Environment Minister's meeting. Kobe, Japan.
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2-13 June 2008
Twenty-eighth sessions of the Subsidiary Bodies. Bonn, Germany.
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27 Aug – 1 Sep
International Disaster Risk Conference (IDRC). Davos, Switzerland.
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PreventionWeb meeting calender

 

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