Sunday, April 20, 2025
World Tsunami Awareness Day 2023 today

Riding the waves of uncertainty

by damith
November 5, 2023 1:10 am 0 comment 1.4K views

Tsunamis are hazardous and devastating. According to the World Health Organization, in low-lying coastal regions, nearly 700 million people are susceptible to severe sea level occurrences, including tsunamis.

Although they are relatively rare, tsunamis can have catastrophic consequences. According to data from the United Nations, 58 tsunamis in the past 100 years have affected over 260,000 people, or 4,600 lives on average—a death toll that surpasses that of any other natural catastrophe.

Sri Lanka is all too familiar with the devastation that accompanies a tsunami. As one of the many countries that fell victim to the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami, the tidal wave had an incomparable immediate impact, with the death toll calculated to be over 36,000 (30,957 persons were reported killed with an additional 5,644 people identified as missing). While a majority of the victims were women and children, a staggering 800,000 individuals were displaced across the country.

Tsunamis are unpredictable and formidable natural disasters that respect no boundaries. They challenge our preparedness and resilience, and compound the often-glaring social inequalities.

This year’s World Tsunami Awareness Day is most opportune, in the context of the global and local economic crises, to examine not just the physical forces that drive tsunamis, but also the human forces required to withstand them.

The theme, ‘Fighting Inequality for a Resilient Future,’ is apt, as it highlights the dire necessity of reducing people’s exposure and vulnerability to harm.

Disasters bring massive economic costs—the preliminary assessment of damage of the 2004 tsunami estimated that Sri Lanka had suffered asset damage of approximately US$1 billion (4.5 percent of GDP), which required US$1.5–1.6 billion (7.5 percent of GDP) in medium-term recovery financing (including immediate relief), and the fisheries and tourism sectors suffered estimated losses of US$200 million and US$130 million.

Given Sri Lanka’s evolving risk profile, and the current debt sustainability issues, should a disaster of such proportions strike, the resultant damage would be on an overwhelming scale.

Innovative solutions in disaster preparedness

Following the tsunami, Sri Lanka has directed concerted efforts towards inclusive disaster risk management.

The ‘Partnerships for Strengthening School Preparedness for tsunamis in the Asia Pacific Region (Tsunami Project)’ is one of significance in tsunami disaster preparedness and awareness.

Funded by the Government of Japan and implemented by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the project has been advancing tsunami preparedness in three phases since 2017. The project has developed tsunami preparedness plans and conducted tsunami drills in more than 115 schools and has equipped the teachers, other academic staff and communities with relevant knowledge to respond to and withstand tsunamis.

Building on this, the third phase works towards strengthening school tsunami preparedness in twenty-eight more highly vulnerable, tsunami-prone schools in the coastal belt of the Southern and Eastern provinces reaching over 9,000 school children.

Four selected schools have also been equipped with early warning systems. Complementing the direct interventions at the schools, the project has capacitated approximately 115 provincial and zonal education officials, including school principals and teachers, to train more personnel to contextualise updated tsunami preparedness plans for the education sector in the two provinces.

Leveraging on the impact of the project, national tsunami exercises were conducted in eleven schools with the participation of 11,000 students, teachers and non-academic officials.

Given the inherent intersection of vulnerabilities and disaster exposure, the project has made a point to ensure that socially excluded and vulnerable groups such as women, children, adolescents, and persons with disabilities are capacitated with the skills for handling disaster events.

At a national level, the project has supported the Disaster Management Center (DMC) by facilitating the exchange of international best practices and technical knowledge via the Indian National Centre for Ocean Information Services, and the Meteorological Departments of Australia and Indonesia.

Attesting to the success of the project, two of the trained schools have been selected for the seventh Indian Oceanwide tsunami readiness exercise, known as Indian Ocean Wave 2023 (IOWave23).

The hidden divide

Inequality creates conditions that render people exposed and vulnerable to disasters. Disasters also disproportionately impact the poorest and most at-risk people, thus worsening inequality. Reducing vulnerability to disasters requires addressing these dimensions – Sri Lanka requires greater investments and a renewed focus on risk-informed development.

As the country embarks on its crisis recovery process, building innovative and inclusive disaster preparedness and management efforts – like that of the Tsunami Project, are crucial.

In a world of rising tides and unpredictable forces, they remind us that the path to safety lies in elevating our preparedness, reducing inequalities, and ensuring passage to high ground.

UNDP: UNDP partners with people at all levels of society to help build nations that can withstand crisis, and drive and sustain the kind of growth that improves the quality of life for everyone.

On the ground in 170 countries and territories, we offer global perspective and local insight to help empower lives and build resilient nations.

www.undp.org/srilanka

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