Lecture 6: Vulnerability Analysis

HannaatUNU 10,809 views 59 slides Mar 14, 2019
Slide 1
Slide 1 of 59
Slide 1
1
Slide 2
2
Slide 3
3
Slide 4
4
Slide 5
5
Slide 6
6
Slide 7
7
Slide 8
8
Slide 9
9
Slide 10
10
Slide 11
11
Slide 12
12
Slide 13
13
Slide 14
14
Slide 15
15
Slide 16
16
Slide 17
17
Slide 18
18
Slide 19
19
Slide 20
20
Slide 21
21
Slide 22
22
Slide 23
23
Slide 24
24
Slide 25
25
Slide 26
26
Slide 27
27
Slide 28
28
Slide 29
29
Slide 30
30
Slide 31
31
Slide 32
32
Slide 33
33
Slide 34
34
Slide 35
35
Slide 36
36
Slide 37
37
Slide 38
38
Slide 39
39
Slide 40
40
Slide 41
41
Slide 42
42
Slide 43
43
Slide 44
44
Slide 45
45
Slide 46
46
Slide 47
47
Slide 48
48
Slide 49
49
Slide 50
50
Slide 51
51
Slide 52
52
Slide 53
53
Slide 54
54
Slide 55
55
Slide 56
56
Slide 57
57
Slide 58
58
Slide 59
59

About This Presentation

Lecture 6: Vulnerability Analysis
Dr. Dyah R. Hizbaron (UGM)
2019 ProSPER.Net Young Researchers' School
5 March 2019


Slide Content

VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS Dr. Dyah Rahmawati Hizbaron , S.Si , M.T, M.Sc Faculty of Geography , Universitas Gadjah Mada Mailto : [email protected] Scopus ID:  36450403500

OUTLINE Basic Concept on Vulnerability & Element at Risk Idea of Ecosystem Based Disaster Risk Reduction in Indonesia Case Study 1. Kotagede – A physical vulnerability Case Study 2. Sidoarjo – A social vulnerability Case Study 3. Sulawesi – An economic vulnerability Case Study 4. Gunungkidul – An environmental vulnerability

Learning Outcome Understand basic concept of vulnerability and element at risk Develop critical thinking about different types of vulnerability indicators and the scales at which they were developed; Develop critical thinking about different types of vulnerability

Human intervention to environment has been ages, the level of impact is varied, local to global Human occupied land, whereas, some of them are prone areas towards natural disaster 1700 1800 1900 2000 2050 1600 BASIC CONCEPT OF VULNERABILTY & ELEMENT AT RISK

1700 1800 1900 2000 2050 1600 VULNERABILITY HG Society + Natural Law = Vulnerable Society PI Society + Spatial Inequality = Vulnerable Society Id Society + Environmental Impact = Vulnerable Society Md Society + Global Impact = Vulnerable Society Vulnerability keynote: inability, adapt, cope, resilient, shock, stress

Risk Formula: R = HxV R = ( HxV )/C R = [e, s, f, c] H is latent, content wise exist, place as Coeficient R is high if V is high V is high if element at risk is high V is high but at the same time have C V and C are two sided coin

What is Vulnerability? The degree of loss to a given element at risk or set of elements at risk resulting form the occurrence of a natural phenomenon of a given magnitude and expressed on a scale from 0 (no damage) to 1 (total damage) (UNDRO, 1991). Indication of people’s exposure to external risks, shocks and stresses and their ability to cope with, and recover from the resulting impacts (DFID, 2004; ISDR, 2004)

Vulnerability is a concept which describes factors or constraints of an economic, social, physical or geographic nature, which reduce the ability to prepare for and cope with the impact of hazards. VULNERABLE AREA There is a potential for an event to occur

Formulation of Vulnerability PHYSICAL SOCIAL ECONOMIC ENVIRONMENT Vulnerability = Exposure + Resistance + Resilience

WHAT IS ECO-DRR? ECOSYSTEM BASED DISASTER RISK REDUCTION OR ECO-DRR The Sendai Framework 2015 The Sustainable Development Goals 2015 COP 21 Paris CC Agreement The Lisbon Treaty human-capital management within emergency situation natural-capital management within whole disaster management cycle REACTIVE PROACTIVE Shifting Paradigm TECHNICAL ENGINEERING TECHNICAL & SOCIAL ENGINEERING A MULTILATERAL INITIATIVES

Case Study 1. Kotagede – Earthquake 2006

Distance Magnitude Graph Seismic activity originated from <500km from city centres Surface lithology in Bantul area ( Quartenary sediment) had increase susceptibility of the area towards any ground shaking ( Setijadji , et al., 2008). Bantul District has potentially high velocity plate movement up to 60 mm/year ( Marso et al, 2008). Seismic Hazard Overview

Introduction Research Rationale Why selects Kotagede ? Trending disaster occurrences Local vulnerability is high Element at risks varied Existing countermeasures are minimum High tourism potentials No Age Sayangan Bodon Total 1 0 - 14 403 440 843 2 15 - 24 352 232 584 3 25 - 49 698 553 1.251 4 > 50 479 315 794 Total 1.932 1.540 3.472 Disaster experience: 5.760 death toll, 102.234 injured people, 2.020.788 refugees, 302.868 unit houses destructed (non habitable), 252.909 unit houses destructed (habitable) from 2006 earthquake The research area is an accumulation well built assets, p redominantly settlement with very specific characteristics Rumah Joglo Rumah Kalang Museum Art Workshop Narrow street The research area is a border area among two administrative unit, which entitle for intra-regional coordination

The research area is an accumulation of element at risk >>> medium to high physical vulnerability indices ( Hizbaron , 2012) Physical Vulnerability Market Mosque Tiga Ringin Omah UGM Tourism Graph Decreased!

Vulnerable Groups? Vulnerable Groups >> Children >> Elderly >> Productive ages Element at risk (1) Urban dwellers Tourists Different vulnerability indices per target groups Those living in dense settlement Those visiting as tourist

Who are Vulnerable? Those who are living/inhabited prone hazard area Those who have less capacity to withstand any disturbance (stress/shock) Those who personally handicapped, discriminated or less access to normal treatment

Economic Vulnerability? Marginal Economy >> Trade >> Service >> Tourism >> Industry >> Etc Element at risk Small enterprises Medium enterprises Large enterprises

Physical Vulnerability? Fragile structure : >> Wooden house >> Brick house >> Traditional house >> Tiled roof house Element at risk Traditional house Cultural objects Cultural sites Heavy tiled roof subject to earthquake Brick cement wall subject to earthquake Wooden house subject to fire

INFRASTRUCTURE DAMAGE (brick – wooden house) Rumah Kalang . Small Alleys – Narrow Street Different length of each alleys have different vulnerability indices

Cultural Heritage Object. Small Alleys – Narrow Street Urban Heritage At Risk? Traditional structure has different fragility indices with modern structure More than 2 m high wall with strong structure

Built up area are vulnerable? Rumah Joglo . Small Alleys – Narrow Street Different height wall along narrow street have different likelihood to vulnerability indices

Types of Vulnerability (1) Physical Vulnerability Potential for physical impact on built environment or infrastructure and population Analyzed per group of construction or structural types Intrinsic quality of a structure and does not depend on location Social Vulnerability Potential impacts of events on groups such as the poor, women, children, elderly etc Analyzed per population cluster

Types of Vulnerability (2) Economic Vulnerability Potential impacts of hazards on economic assets and processes (i.e. business interruption, secondary effects such as increased poverty and job loss) Analyzed per sector or per assets types Environmental Vulnerability Potential impacts of events on the environment E.g. hydrologic condition after eruption

Environmental creates Vulnerability?

EcoDRR Praxis: Need to Understand your Environment Meeting Points (1) Identification of meeting points shall be conducted by the community. However, RS/GIS technique also make it possible to provide such information using high resolution image. The indicated meeting points will be kept to avoid ambiguous result from community mapping.

Strong Points for Kotagede Meeting Points (2)

Research Finding Second Round FGD They are able to identify vulnerable elements

Second Round FGD They are able to identify evacuation routes, meeting points and fire extinguishers Research Finding

Research Output Signs:

1m IKONOS – 17 September 2006 @ DigitalGlobe 1m IKONOS – 11 May 2007 @ DigitalGlobe CASE STUDY 2. SIDOARJO – HOW TO COLLECT DATA SPATIAL TEMPORAL FOR VULNERABILITY

1m IKONOS – 05 Januari 2008 @ DigitalGlobe 1m IKONOS – 14 Februari 2009 @ DigitalGlobe

0,5 m GeoEye-1 perekaman 31 Mei 2010 @ Digitallobe 0,5 m GeoEye-1 perekaman 30 Nov 2012 @ DigitaGlobe

0.5 m WorldView-2 @ DigitalGlobe 0.5 m WorldView-2 @ DigitalGlobe OBSERVE POST ERUPTION GA. SINABUNG Building Footprint

Medium resolution using unsupervised hybrid-based built-up extraction Medium resolution using change detection process of built-up areas

http://www.un-spider.org/node/11443

http:// geoportal.puspics.ugm.ac.id /documents/74

http:// ecodrr.ugm.ac.id

Head of National Agency of Disaster Management Regulation No. 2/2012 on Risk Analysis Head of National Agency of Disaster Management Regulation No. 3/2012 on Capacity Analysis 34 provinces, 416 districts ( kabupaten ), and 98 municipalities ( kotamadya ). Hazard Losses Capacity Hazard Index (Magnitude & intensity) Exposure Index (Population, Socio-Culture Component) Losses Index (Economic, Physical & Env. Component) Capacity Index (Government, Early Warning, Mitigation Preparedness) Hazard Map Vulnerability Map Capacity Map Risk Map How to conduct Vulnerability Analysis? Case Study 3. Sulawesi – An economic Vulnerability

Research Result Kota Manado

Population, Element at Risk and Risk Distribution of Kota Manado Research Result

Legend Administrative Borders District Borders Sub-district Borders Administrative Capital Province Capital Province Capital District Capital Sub-district Capital Topography High Point Shoreline River Periodic River Spatial Structure City Structure System National Center Activity City Center Sub-city Center Environmental Center Power Plant Network Structure Electrical Station Control Stem Power Plant Solar Power Plant Electrical Stem Network Electrical Solar Network Water Resource Network Structure Potential of Groundwater Basin Very High High Middle Small None Transportation Network Structure Last Processing Waste Network Waste Structure Communication Network Structure Communication Tower International Airport Local Jet Special Terminal or port Terminal Type A Relocation Terminal B Container terminal New terminal Railway Station Railway Track Plan Circulation of Island Tourism Main Road Network Primer Road Network Collective Road Network Local Road Network Highway Network Plan Ringroad Network Plan Two Track Network Plan Bridges Plan Bridges Plan Tsunami Evacuation Plan Risk and Spatial Plan of Kota Manado Accumulated spatial structure are at risk area Research Result

Kota Makassar Research Result

Research Result Population, Element at Risk and Risk Distribution of Kota Makassar

Center of Activity Airport City Center Sub-city Center Environment Center Type A Type B Port International Port Regional Port Local Port Fishery Port Planning Port Subdistrict Borders District Borders Shoreline Water Processing Instalation Drinking Water Processing Electrical Network Electrical Station Control Electrical Power Plant Water gate Telephone controller Cable storage Telephone cable Highway Main Road Local Road Collector Road Planning Road Main Road Planning Local Road Planning Collector Road Planning Monorail Railway Plan Monorail Station Train Railway Plan Pipeline Water Network (Diameters) Main Drainage Lake or Water Water Transportation Network Corridor River or Canal Port Type Legend Research Result Risk and Spatial Plan of Kota Makassar Accumulated spatial structure are at risk area

Research Result Kota Gorontalo

Research Result Population, Element at Risk and Risk Distribution of Kota Gorontalo

Spatial Pattern Planning Create Polder system for flood management in Bone Bolango River Area Organizing and developing Oldtown Trade Service area Organizing Taruna Remaja Park Preserve Historical and Cultural Area Rice field People Forrest Local road River Education Green belt and river border Park and open green space Goverment Office Cultural area Settlement Terminal Branch Main Terminal Public Grave Fishery Industry Store Building and industry Shelter Forrest HealthFacilities Trade and services (super block) Trade and services Tourism Area Catchment area Central Market Central Market CBD Fishery port Harbour Pool Research Result Risk and Spatial Plan of Kota Gorontalo Accumulated spatial structure are at moderate risk area

Research Result Risk Ranking and Spatial Plan at National Level

Damage Assessment Data NOT VULNERABILITY DATA INPUT FOR VULNERABILITY ANALYSIS TO IDENTIFY ELEMENT AT RISK DISTRIBUTION!

High resolution of building footprints extracted in a high density area High resolution of building density computed using radius

Case Study 4. Gunungkidul - Drought Geomorphology: Karst area, alluvial material in some areas. Dry, rare to surface water soure . x : 431006; y ; 9107964 (8º 4’ 10,3” BT & 110º 22’ 25,8”); z = 97 mdpl

KARST INDIVIDUAL HOUSEHOLD COLLECTIVE Karst Configuration  soluble rock  water surface absorbed  get into “ luweng ”  minimum water quantity Sub surface river  high spring availability  Environmentally vulnerable Agriculture yet supported Sumur penampungan air hujan (PAH) Pemanfaatan embung Penyaluran air dari mataair Pembelian sumberdaya air Research Problem

Piping system accomodate : 1800 liter/ day (5hrs/24hrs) Highest point at Temon distributed by 8 public hydrant at 8 RT. Vulnerable towards Water Quantity Spring Mapping: Pego , Bekah, dan Tangis .

EcoDRR Praxis

Community Involvement: Water Filtration Information Dokumentasi: Tim KKN – PPM 2014)

Community Training ( Pamswakarsa )

Community Based Disaster Risk Reduction Dokumentasi: Tim KKN – PPM 2014)

Community Assistance Dokumentasi: Tim KKN – PPM 2014)

Thank You