1 / 26

Emergency SHELTER in Natural Disasters

SHELTER Session for t rainings. Emergency SHELTER in Natural Disasters. Shelter after disaster…. What is shelter Emerging trends & challenges – the big picture Phases in shelter Shelter as a process not a product Shelter in emergency operations The shelter tools Time: 90 minutes.

tobit
Download Presentation

Emergency SHELTER in Natural Disasters

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. SHELTER Session for trainings Emergency SHELTER in Natural Disasters

  2. Shelter after disaster… • What is shelter • Emerging trends & challenges – the big picture • Phases in shelter • Shelter as a process not a product • Shelter in emergency operations • The shelter tools Time: 90 minutes

  3. Defining “shelter”…

  4. Shelter concept on a disaster response…

  5. Some shelter numbers… • 66 million – people with houses damaged by 2007 Asia floods (Nepal, Bangladesh, Pakistan, China, DPRK, Vietnam, India) • 1.8 million– homes destroyed or damaged in Pakistan by the last Floods in 2010 • 47.9%- housing as a percentage of total cost of tsunami damage in Indonesia • CHF 100 million - IFRC spend on Aceh transitional shelter programme • 140,000 HH helped by RCRC in Haiti with Emergency Shelter (covering kit, tents & STK) • CHF 310 - cost of a family tent to international specifications • CHF 100– cost of air freighting one family tent • CHF 60– cost of IFRC Shelter Kit • CHF 600– cost of building materials, tools, fixings etc. for Pakistan earthquake transitional shelter 2006

  6. Disaster trends… Climate change + urbanisation + social & economic marginalisation = INCREASED SHELTER RISK

  7. IFRC and shelter… • IFRC is the leading agency in the shelter sector for natural disasters– and few other agencies have shelter in their mandate • National Societies implement a wide range of emergency, transitional and permanent housing. However only since 2006 IFRC has created a Shelter Department.

  8. Before disaster Beyond emergency response The process of sheltering… Disaster & emergency response Before disaster over time households build, extend and upgrade houses using materials, cash, contracted local labour or self-help Beyond emergency response households will over time extend and upgrade shelter solutions provided using materials, cash, contracted local labour or self-help Emergency response should support the sheltering process providing materials, cash, contracted local labour or self-help + technical support as appropriate

  9. Product vs. process… Product / Phase Approach Tent Container House Process/ Needs Approach: Support Money Guidance Materials Tools

  10. Shelter Operations… • Assessments • Programming and Coordination • Implementation • Monitoring and Evaluation

  11. Informed assessments • Assessments: Rapid, detailed, ongoing • What are affected households doing themselves to meet their shelter needs and how can we assist them? (use Sphere 2011 Shelter Checklist – adapt as needed) • Consider separate needs of: • Those displaced temporarily or permanently • From those who can return to the site of their damaged/destroyed home • The issues of tenure

  12. Displaced and non-displaced population

  13. Shelter Programming Emergency Shelter (live saving) – 3 options: 1. Coverage kit: (2 tarps + rope) 2. Shelter Kit: (2 tarps + tools (includes rope + fixings)) 3. Family tent(tents can delay recovery process) + basic/simple technical advice + complemented with NFIs + new HH kit. Early recovery Shelter – 5 options: 1. Transitional shelter (T-shelter) 2. Construction material (roofing, walling, flooring) 3. Tools 4. Cash & Voucher/ credit card 5. Technical support/ awareness campaign (safe shelter) Get Emergency Shelter going & move to Early Recovery ASAP

  14. Coverage Kit • Contents: • 2 tarpaulins (to specs) + 20 metres of rope (10 kg) • Technical advice (one pager on how to fix tarp to rope, wood, and bamboo) • Cost: 40 CHF • Challenges: Rope has to be bought locally. • When to use: • Need for quick, low cost response • There are other materials available (salvaged…) • Plastic Sheeting Guidelines, Shade Nets Guidelines

  15. IFRC Shelter Kit • Contents: • 2 tarps + Shelter Toolkit (20Kg) • Technical advice (one flyer on how to fix tarp to rope, wood, and bamboo) • Cost: 60 CHF • Challenges: • Bulkier than coverage kit. Machetes. • When to use: • Variety of situations, versatile • There are other materials available (salvaged…) • Shelter kit guidelines + SK training

  16. Use of “Shelter Kit”… Repair or build

  17. Family tent • Contents: • 16m2 family tent (64 kg) • Technical advice (one-pager on where to put the tent, how to prepare the ground and how to erect it) • Cost: 310 CHF • Challenges: difficult to combine, evolve, adapt • When to use: • Life-saving need for quick answer and no materials available • Big emergencies (all solutions are needed) • Non-technical reasons • Political issues (Gvmt/ HNS) • Tent guidelines (available with assembly instruction)

  18. Implementation Shelter response…

  19. Implementation EMERGENCY Shelter response…

  20. Implementation EARLY RECOVERY Shelter response…

  21. Other aspects to consider… • Lack of shelter counterpart within HNS • Shelter response should be linked with watsan, health, livelihood (integrated approach) and general relief programming. • Shelter is often a key component of recovery programming – consider household livelihood activities and potential local economic impact of shelter response. • Procurement & Logistics and relief are key to successful shelter. • Gender and crosscutting issues • Include monitoring &evaluation of the solution in budget.

  22. Shelter resources and support • Globally pre-positioned tarps, shelter kits and tents inRegional Logistics Units • Emergency Items Catalogue (ERIC) online www.ifrc.org/emergency-items • FedNet & DMIS: tools and resources, guidelines, videos, documents, examples • Technical focal points within Secretariat (ZO & GVA) to support shelter response, specifications, programming tools, guidance, and longer term programming

  23. Shelter & Settlement TECHNICAL support IFRC HEAD QUARTER (GVA) IFRC ZONE OFFICES

  24. For more information…

  25. Questions? Thanks for your interest !

More Related