LOC12:34
09:34 GMT
GENEVA, May 24 (KUNA) -- Experts in disaster risk reduction on Friday urged
that science and technology be applied more effectively to disaster management
policy and practice.
Their discussions, organized by the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk
Reduction (UNISDR) Scientific and Technical Advisory Group, were part of the
fourth session of the Global Platform for Disaster Risk Reduction, which is
meeting here this week to build consensus ahead of a 2015 world conference.
Despite advances in the natural and social sciences, natural hazards have
continued to increase, the experts said.
"The number of lives lost in disasters has tripled in the past 30 years,
but science can act as a bridge between the private sector, Governments, the
media and society as a whole in the search for solutions", said the experts in
the meeting.
"Risks and opportunities are the same. And there is no development without
risks," said Walter J. Amman, CEO of the Global Risk Forum Davos, Switzerland.
Disaster risk reduction meant disaster management dealing not only with actual
risks but also with preventing potential ones.
A paradigm shift called for moving from a risk-based to a proactive
approach, in which science had valuable insights to provide.
Greater priority should be given to sharing and disseminating scientific
information and finding ways to mainstream science into policies, regulations
and implementation plans for reducing disaster risk, the experts stressed.
Science should also play a greater role in education and media campaigns,
not in a top-down fashion but through dialogue and community outreach.
Experts presented case studies on how science could be used for disaster
risk reduction based on assessment data, best practices and management and
monitoring models.
In Indonesia, for example, where tsunamis were the most frequent hazard,
the Government was tackling the problem head-on by investing in prevention,
and building local-level resilience with community mapping and simulations.
"Science can be useful, usable, and used in disaster risk reduction," said
Takashi Onishi, President of the Japanese Science Council.
He explained that different areas of the country were affected differently
by natural hazards, depending on their levels of vulnerability and exposure.
Simulations, early warning systems and seawalls were in place, but more
efforts were needed to make the scientific applications a real part of daily
life.
Virginia Murray of the United Kingdom Public Health Office, observing that
climate change was contributing to the severity and frequency of disasters,
suggested how effective planning such as air conditioning and food stocks
could help mitigate the impact of such increasing phenomena as heat waves and
drought, particularly on the most vulnerable.
Tailor-made approaches were needed to manage disaster risk now and improve
risk reduction in the future, when hazard forecasting would become even more
important.
Other speakers this afternoon said that technology was often underestimated
in disaster risk reduction and suggested that a technology transfer mechanism
could help policymakers. Social media, networking and texting could also be
useful.
The experts concluded that there should be a regular and strengthened
dialogue between scientific communities and political leaders; that more use
should be made of science and technology to inform policy and enable action;
and that science should be better integrated into the post-2015 framework for
reducing disaster risk.
That framework was one of the main topics of discussion at the week's
meeting, which was helping to lay the groundwork for a 2015 world conference
on disaster risk reduction. (end)
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