by ClickGreen staff. Published Tue 21 Jul 2015 14:47
One person a second loses their home
to natural disasters
In the last seven years, an estimated one person every second has
been forced to flee their home by a natural disaster, with 19.3
million people forced to flee their homes in 2014 alone, according
to a new report.
The research suggests disaster displacement is on the rise, and as
policy leaders worldwide advance towards the adoption of a post-2015
global agenda, the time has never been better to address it.
In the report, the Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC) of
the Norwegian Refugee Council (NRC) released today its global
report, The Global Estimates: People displaced by disasters. The
report reveals how, in 2014, 17.5 million people were forced to flee
their homes by disasters brought on by weather-related hazards such
as floods and storms, and 1.7 million by geophysical hazards such as
earthquakes.
“The millions of lives devastated by disasters is more often a
consequence of bad man-made structures and policies, than the forces
of mother nature,” said Jan Egeland, Secretary General of NRC. “A
flood is not in itself a disaster, the catastrophic consequences
happen when people are neither prepared nor protected when it hits.”
The report points to the man-made factors that drive an overall
increasing trend in disaster displacement, like rapid
economic
development, urbanisation and population growth in hazard prone
areas. “These factors are a toxic mix, because when such hazards
strike there are more homes and people in their path, and therefore
flight becomes necessary for survival” said director of IDMC,
Alfredo Zamudio. Climate change is also expected to exacerbate the
situation in the future, as severe weather hazards become more
frequent and intense.
The report argues that these drivers are increasing the number of
people becoming displaced, and the risk that their displacement
becomes a long-term problem. Today, the likelihood of being
displaced by a disaster is 60% higher than it was four decades ago,
and an
analysis
of 34 cases reveals that disaster displacement can last for up to 26
years.
People in both rich and poor countries can be caught in protracted,
or long-term, displacement. In the US, over 56,000 people are still
in need of housing assistance following Hurricane Sandy in 2012, and
230,000 people have been unable to establish new homes in Japan
following the 2011 earthquake, tsunami and nuclear accident.
“Governments should prioritise measures to strengthen the resilience
of people whose displacement risks becoming protracted, or has
already become so,” said William Lacy Swing, director general of
International Organization for Migration, which assisted in the
data
collection for the report. “If communities are strengthened and
ready beforehand, with solid infrastructure, early warning systems,
and other such measures, displacement can be used as a short term
coping strategy, or at best be avoided altogether”.
The report comes at a crucial time this year as various past and
future policy processes come together. These include the Sustainable
Development Goals which are to be adopted in September, as well as
ongoing preparations for the World Humanitarian Summit in 2016. What
this report shows is how disaster displacement bridges all these
policy processes.
“We can talk about sustainability,
climate change
and a reformed humanitarian architecture” said Zamudio, “but to
ensure that all these policy processes turn into concrete action, we
need to pay closer attention to those living on the front lines; in
this case the millions of men, women and children currently on the
run from disasters worldwide”.