UN develops early warning tool for drought prone regions
29 November 2013
UN develops innovative early warning
tool for drought prone Asia-Pacific
regions
•
• Bangkok (UN ESCAP Strategic
Communications and Advocacy Section) – Senior officials
from governments across the Asia-Pacific region today agreed
on a set of collective priorities and ground-breaking
initiatives that will build resilience to natural disasters
and further enhance regional cooperation, at a meeting
convened by the United Nations Economic and Social
Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) in
Bangkok.
•
• Faced with the continued, severe
impact of natural disasters across the region,
representatives at the Third Session of the Committee on
Disaster Risk Reduction called on ESCAP to facilitate
regional cooperation aimed at harnessing technological
advances for resilient, inclusive and sustainable
development.
•
• In line with this, ESCAP's
long-standing Regional Space Applications Programme for
Sustainable Development (RESAP) announced the development
and operationalization of a new regional mechanism on
drought. With this mechanism, the monitoring and early
warning capabilities of drought-prone countries will be
significantly strengthened through the effective use of
space-based information provided by service nodes in the
region.
•
• Every year in the Asia-Pacific
region, droughts push millions of farmers into debt and
deepen poverty and hunger but this new regional mechanism is
capable of issuing early warnings before the drought is
visible to the human eye. Its satellite sensors will detect
warning soil and water conditions before the worst of the
droughts take hold, so that early action can be
taken.
•
• Initially supported by Chinese and
Indian space agencies, the regional drought mechanism will
provide monitoring and early warning services and capacity
building for drought-prone countries in the region. Mongolia
is already piloting the mechanism, and Cambodia, Myanmar and
Sri Lanka are expected to join soon as pilot
counties.
•
• “The commitment shown by member
States to mainstream disaster risk reduction into their
sustainable development plans is encouraging, and raises the
hope that the Asia-Pacific region will emerge as a global
role model in this regard,” said ESCAP’s Director of
Information and Communications Technology and Disaster Risk
Reduction Division, Ms. Shamika Sirimanne. “And there is
significant momentum towards greater coherence of efforts in
disaster risk reduction across the
region.”
•
• H.E. Ms. Fathimath Thasneem,
Deputy Minister, National Disaster Management Centre,
Government of the Republic of the Maldives, and Chair of the
Committee Meeting added: “Faced with the major challenge
of strengthening resilience to natural disasters, ESCAP
member states have come together to reinforce how they work
together in the region, launch new initiatives and set out
an ambitious collective agenda for the years
ahead.
•
• "This has been a most timely and
successful meeting, that has benefitted from ESCAP’s
unique role in bringing together officials from ministries
of planning and finance with disaster managers in order to
mainstream disaster risk
reduction.”
•
• Echoing this, a clear message
to emerge from the meeting was that governments need to
place resilience on the core agenda of planning and finance
ministries, to ensure that disaster risk reduction does not
take place in isolation. Instead it should be brought
together with climate change adaptation and sustainable
development into a ‘resilience framework’ with clear
performance metrics.
•
• To this end, the senior
officials asked ESCAP to develop a set of measurable
‘resilience indicators’ that will inform policymakers of
their country’s preparedness level. They also requested
ESCAP’s support in strengthening disaster-related
statistics and improving damage and loss assessments and
datasets.
•
•
• Organized with the active
participation of a range of United Nations actors involved
in disaster risk reduction, the outcomes will be tabled at
the ESCAP Commission Session in May 2014. They will also
inform discussions at other forthcoming high-level events,
including the 6th Asia-Pacific Ministerial Conference in
June 2014 and the 3rd United Nations World Conference on
Disaster Risk Reduction in March
2015.
•
ends