Manila Standard

UN’s global disaster alert systems goal faces uphill climb

- By Amélie Bottolier-Depois

HOW can anyone seek shelter from a natural disaster they don’t even know is coming?

Last year the United Nations called for every person on the planet to be covered by early warning systems by 2027 – but months into the effort it is becoming clear that the project will require more data and expertise.

With a relatively low price tag of $3.1 billion, the UN’s plan hopes to implement the simple principle of early warning systems: assess risks using meteorolog­ical data, forecast impending problems using modeling, prepare population­s ahead of time, and send out alerts to those expected to be impacted.

But building out those steps poses unique issues at each turn, according to those involved in the effort, many of whom are gathered this week in New York for a historic UN conference on water-related crises.

In Tajikistan, 100 years of weather data exist only on paper, chair of the country’s environmen­tal protection committee, Bahodur Sheralizod­a said.

Digitizing this data could provide “more precise weather forecasts” or be applied to climate modeling, he added.

“With the small investment­s, we can have really big impact in the long run.”

To help fill the data gap, the US National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion (NOAA) is also hoping to deploy weather stations made from 3D printers around the world, said the agency’s chief scientist Sarah Kapnick.

When it comes to analyzing the meteorolog­ical data and predicting future weather events, there is also a lack of local expertise, said Stefan Uhlenbrook, director of hydrology, water and cryosphere at the UN World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on.

“You need local capacity to run the local models,” he told AFP.

Some help should be coming from NOAA, which Kapnick said has plans to “train local climate forecaster­s and leaders.”

After risks are identified, getting those alerts to remote population­s poses possibly the biggest hurdle.

“To reach the last mile... and then to get them acting and prepared is a big challenge,” said

Uhlenbrook.

This is where the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC), a WMO partner in the field, comes in.

Regular training and drills

For IFRC Secretary General Jagan Chapagain, the country of Bangladesh should be viewed as a model to replicate.

Scarred by the horrific 1970 cyclone that killed hundreds of thousands, the South Asian country has for decades built up storm-resistant shelters and warns residents of upcoming dangers, by bicycle if necessary, Chapagain told AFP.

While church bells, loudspeake­rs and sirens are still used as warning systems in many isolated places, alerts sent via radio, TV and SMS have become the norm.

“In 2022, 95 percent of the world’s population had access to mobile broadband networks and close to 75 percent of the population owned a mobile phone,” said Ursula Wynhoven with the Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union.

That makes mobile networks “powerful communicat­ion channels” for alerts, especially because “SMS warnings can be targeted to reach only those located in an at-risk area,” she added.

Few developing countries have installed such systems, she said, noting a “relatively low cost.”

WMO chief Petteri Taalas also highlighte­d the cost effectiven­ess of setting up early warning programs, saying that “you’ll get the money back at least tenfold that you invest.”

He pledged at the UN Water conference to speed up implementa­tion of the UN’s 2027 goal, beginning with water-related disasters.

Floods and droughts account for 75 percent of climate-related disasters, which are expected to increase further due to global warming.

But simply alerting a population is not enough —there must also be “regular training and drills,” warns IFRC chief Chapagain.

People must practice the processes of interpreti­ng different signals and finding the nearest escape routes or shelter.

“Once people understand the logic, they manage these things better,” he said.

While climate change is expected to intensify storms, at the opposite extreme, it is also expected to increase the severity of droughts.

Though the potential for drought-induced disaster happens more slowly, Uhlenbrook said, warnings are still important to protect livelihood­s.

For example, “we had in Europe a very dry, warm winter, so the (water) reservoir levels are very low,” Uhlenbrook said.

While climate change is expected to intensify storms, at the opposite extreme, it is also expected to increase the severity of droughts

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