1 / 36

EM-DAT The International Disaster Database

EM-DAT: International Disaster Database provides data on over 18,000 disasters, aiding humanitarian response. Explore its criteria, impacts, and methodology.

Download Presentation

EM-DAT The International Disaster Database

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. EM-DATThe International DisasterDatabase CRED – University of Louvain, Belgium Regina BELOW Expert Meeting on Hazard and Disaster Data, May 19-20, 2010 - Copenhagen

  2. AIM OF THE DATABASE AND GENERAL INFORMATION

  3. EM-DAT: International Disaster Database, created in 1988 and maintained by CRED Compile information on occurrence and impacts of over 18,000 natural and technological disasters from 1900 until present Objective: Provide evidence-base to humanitarian and development actors at national and international levels Database maintained by Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters – CRED (Research Institute Health and Society (IRSS) - University of Louvain, Brussels, Belgium) Project funded by OFDA/USAID, USA

  4. PARTNERSHIP NETWORK • UN AGENCIES • WHO • OCHA • UN-ISDR • UNDP GOVERNMENT/MULTILATERAL AGENCIES • US Government • National governments • NOAA • World Bank • European Union • ESA NON-GOVERNMENTAL INSTITUTIONS IFRC ADRC National organizations PRIVATE COMPANIES MünichRe SwissRe

  5. CONTENT OF THE DATABASE

  6. Disasters in EM-DAT are defined as: “a situation or event which overwhelms local capacity, necessitating a request to the national or international level for external assistance, or is recognised as such by a multilateral agency or by at least two sources, such as national, regional or international assistance groups and the media”

  7. EM-DAT CRITERIA • 10 or more people reported killed • and/or • 100 or more people reported affected • and/or • Call for international assistance/declaration of a state of emergency

  8. Information on Human • and Economic Impact of: • Natural disasters (62%) • Geological (Earthquake, volcano, dry mass movement) • Hydrological (Flood, wet mass movement) • Climatological (Extreme temperature, drought, wildfire) • Meteorological (Storm) • Biological (Epidemic, insect infestation, animal stampede) • Technological disasters (38%) • Transport accidents • Industrial accidents • Miscellaneous accidents

  9. MEASURING HUMAN AND ECONOMIC IMPACTS • Number of killed: • “persons confirmed as dead and persons missing and presumed dead” • Number of injured: • “people suffering from physical injuries, trauma or an illness requiring medical treatment as a direct result of a disaster” • Homeless: • “people needing immediate assistance for shelter” • Affected: • “persons requiring immediate assistance during a period of emergency, including displaced or evacuated people” • Total number of affected: Injured + Homeless + Affected • Economic damages: value of the immediate damage at the time of the event (direct damage in US$)

  10. STANDARD TEMPLATE

  11. STANDARD TEMPLATE

  12. METHODOLOGY Level 1 DISASTER EVENT Level 2 COUNTRY 1 COUNTRY 2 Level 3 SOURCE 1 SOURCE 2 SOURCE 3 SOURCE 1 SOURCE 2 SOURCE 3 VALIDATION PUBLIC

  13. VALIDATION SHEET

  14. VALIDATION • Data entered and updated daily • Monthly validation process before making • data available for the public (3 months interval) • Internal error cross checking • Yearly data quality control

  15. COLLECTION OF DATA AND TECHNICAL QUESTIONS

  16. UNITED NATIONS • OCHA, IRIN, WHO MAIN DATA SOURCES (Priority List) • GOVERNMENTAL SOURCES • Official Country Figures • US GOVERNMENT • OFDA, NOAA, DFO, USGS IFRC AND NGO’s • REINSURANCE COMPANIES • SwissRe, MünichRe • INSURANCE MAGAZINE • Lloyd Casualty Week RESEARCH CENTRES • PRESS/MEDIA • AFP, Reuters

  17. SPECIFIC DATA SOURCES • EARTHQUAKE • USGS • FLOODS • DFO • EPIDEMIC • WHO • ECONOMIC LOSSES • ECLAC, Reinsurance Comp. • INDUSTRIAL ACCIDENTS • UN/APELL

  18. CONSISTENCY/UPDATE OF DATA

  19. METHODOLOGY • Data must be comparable over time and space • Standard methodology for entering data • Clear stated methodology, based on 20 years experience and posted on the website • Figures confirmed by at least 2 sources • Use of priority sources

  20. STRENGHTS OF EM-DAT • Unique free accessible database • Acts as a reference point for global analysis of disaster occurrence and impact • Unique basis for policy papers on disaster reduction and risks • International recognition and credibility • Capacity to provide methods and guidelines (20 years experience) • Transparent conventions regarding data sources and internal protocol • Standard data templates • Global and coherent data

  21. LIMITATIONS OF EM-DAT • Global database • Limited potential for analysis in terms of disaster occurrence and impact on smaller, intra-country spatial scales • -Public aspect of EM-DAT may lead to inappropriate use of data

  22. EMDAT : CREDibility • Long experience in data collection & management • Normative rules, clear definition • Clearly-stated methodology • Validation methods and tools • Transparency • Automatization (data entry and outputs) • Comparability of its data across time and space • UNIQUE PUBLIC GLOBAL REFERENCE DATABASE

  23. ACCESS TO DATA

  24. CRED OUTPUTS • 30 Years Natural Disasters (1973-2003) • Statistical Annex of the WDR (IFRC) • Press Release (ISDR) • Annual Statistical Review • CRED Crunch

  25. EXTERNAL OUTPUTS World Bank Natural Disasters Hotspots ISDR Living with Risk UNDP Reducing Disaster Risk

  26. EM-DAT ONLINE www.emdat.be • Different search options: • (1) Country profiles* • (2) Natural & technological disaster profiles* • (3) Disaster list* • (4) Advanced search* • (5) Maps • (6) Trend figures • * Dynamic

  27. EM-DAT USERS • Ministries and specialized agencies (white & policy papers, budget justifications, planning, priorities) • Red Cross and NGOs • Consultant firms (environmental, land use) • Insurance firms • High school teachers, Undergraduate University projects • Research (environment, geography, urbanization, tourism)

  28. WEB-SITE USAGE (2008/2009)

  29. DATA IN EUROPE

  30. DATA GAPS FOR EUROPE • Systematic reporting of disaster impact is weak (depend on centralization) • Realistic and appropriate methods to measure human impact in European context should be developed • Common data standards for reporting need to be established across European Union countries (and intra – country)

  31. CONCLUSIONS • Building on existing efforts better then starting from scratch • The « Kiss principle » : Keep it Short and Simple • Problems of disaster data collection in the Europe will be the same as problems of data collection in the world

  32. THANK YOU … • CONTACT • CRED • 30, Clos Chapelle-aux-Champs • 1200 Brussels – Belgium • Tel: +32-2-764-3327/Fax-3441 • E-Mail: contact@cred.be • Website: www.cred.be

  33. QUESTIONS

  34. "Common protocol" for georeferencing global disasterdatabases (interoperability) • More precise information on disaster locations (additional data sources and/or linking to other (global) datasets • Production of Spatial analysis & disaster footprints

  35. CONTEXT AND NEEDS • Lack of accessible information remain major barrier for better disaster prevention, mitigation, preparedness and reduction • Need of comprehensive understanding of complete human, economic and social impact of disasters • Decision-makers need to be informed on where to invest and how to design sustainable project

  36. ISSUES HIGHLIGHTED • Disaster definitions: Differences & lack of standardized terminology (low comparability) • Disaster typology: Disaster (sub)type classification, primary/secondary event • Geo-referencing: Data resolution • Temporal aspects: Difficulties in reporting start and end dates • Methodology: Lack of publicly available methodology => transparency & comparability, ambiguity of variables (definitions, sources, criteria) • Sourcing: Lack/Overabundance of data sources

More Related