The
Inter-American Committee for Natural Disaster Reduction (IACNDR)
The Inter-American
Committee for Natural Disaster Reduction (IACNDR) is the main forum of
the OAS and the Inter-American System for the analysis of policies and
strategies aimed at natural disaster reduction in the context of the sustainable
development of member states. The OAS General Assembly established the
IACNDR (AG/RES. XXIX-O-99) based on the need to strengthen the role of
the OAS in natural disaster reduction and emergency preparedness.
The IACNDR is chaired
by the Secretary General of the OAS and comprises:
- The Chair of the
Permanent Council.
- The Assistant
Secretary General of the OAS.
- The President
of the Inter American Development Bank (IDB).
- The Director General
of the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO).
- The Secretary
General of the Pan-American Institute of Geography and History.
- The Director General
of the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA).
- The Executive
Secretary of the Inter American Council for Integral Development (CIDI).
The purpose of the
IACNDR is to propose policies and strategies that can guide member states
decisions on natural disaster reduction. Specifically, these proposals
must contribute to reducing natural disasters through the implementation
of sustainable development mechanisms that reduce the countries
vulnerability, and through the design of emergency preparedness and response
coordination and cooperation tools, so that international and national
assistance can be more effective and prompt.
The IACNDR has established three Working Groups:
- Vulnerability
Assessment and Indexing, headed by the OAS.
- Financing and
Natural Disaster Reduction, headed by the IDB.
- Emergency Preparedness
and Response, headed by PAHO.
The first Working
Group advises the IACNDR on the development and application of vulnerability
assessment mechanisms and the production of reliable vulnerability indicators.
The second Working Group researches and recommends alternative financial
support methods for reducing vulnerability to natural disasters. The third
Working Group evaluates and proposes mechanisms for improving international
and national coordination in the event of an emergency.
The IACNDR, in supporting
the OAS Permanent Council, can:
- Strive to reinforce
the commitment of member states to the mandates adopted in the field
of natural disaster reduction.
- Recommend the
setting of priorities in the use of resources by the OAS and the Inter-American
System.
- Support technical
recommendations that may include:
- Guiding investment
resources for vulnerability reduction towards specific sectors of
the population or specific geographical areas.
- Define priorities
in the field of technical cooperation.
- Reinforce the
links between the concepts of disaster reduction and development, as
part of the three main components of hemispheric policy: democracy,
free trade, and sustainable development.
- Identify preferences
in the implementation of vulnerability assessment and indexing techniques
to be supported by international development assistance.
As noted by OAS Secretary
General César Gaviria during the first Committee meeting, the IACNDR
is meant to be a space for dialogue, reflection, and the proposal of policies
and strategies to guide the decisions of member states on natural disaster
reduction, prevention, and preparedness. Moreover, the participation of
the IACNDR member organizations should increase the capacity to identify,
assess, and reduce the vulnerability of the peoples and economic and social
infrastructure of the Americas.
OAS /Inter-American
Committee
for Natural Disaster Reduction (IACNDR)
Working Group on Vulnerability Assessment and Indexing
The Vulnerability
Assessment and Indexing (VAI) Working Group, headed by the OAS, is one
of three Working Groups of the Inter-American Committee for Natural Disaster
Reduction (IACNDR). The objective of VAI is to draft recommendations on
the structure, function and application of vulnerability assessment mechanisms
and indicators for natural disasters. These recommendations are submitted
to the Permanent Council of the OAS for consideration, and to assist member
States in the implementation of the mandates adopted. The recommendations
should propose policies and strategies for discussion and adoption by
governments or institutions that in some way generate and use vulnerability
assessment and indicators.
Vulnerability assessments
and indicators are necessary for reducing the impact of natural disasters,
both in terms of development actions and emergency preparedness. They
are also needed to understand risk as the basis upon which to make investment
decisions. The risk arising from the impact of natural disasters may be
financial, economic and physical. Vulnerability assessment in the hemisphere
has been developed, in theory and practice, to discuss natural hazard
vulnerability reduction, taking account of socioeconomic aspects and geographical
location. In each case, it is possible to perform at least a preliminary
assessment of vulnerability levels and begin to analyze the costs and
benefits in financial, economic and physical terms, particularly in relation
to reducing threats to life.
Governments are currently
considering ways to approach risk reduction in natural disasters as they
observe, among other things, increasing human casualties and material
losses, and the greater frequency of natural disasters. Another factor
is the recognition that low levels of risk and losses due to natural disasters
can be turned into a market instrument to attract foreign investment.
Moreover, in the near future the development policies of governments will
be assessed on the basis of whether they internalize or externalize vulnerability
to natural hazards.
Thus, the importance
of the task of the Working Group on Vulnerability Assessment and Indexing
rests on the following:
- Member States
of the OAS are showing interest in the application of vulnerability
assessment mechanisms and indicators in the various OAS forums.
- The international
community, technical cooperation programs and the private sector are
constantly increasing their efforts in this area as the observe the
potential for development in Member States.
- Vulnerability
assessment and indicators are essential components to improve disaster
preparedness and response, as well as the financing of disaster reduction,
the other two tasks of the IACNDR.
The VAI is directly
accountable to the hemispheric mechanism created by Member States through
the IACNDR, as follows:
- The IACNDR is
primarily an effort by the governments of the hemisphere to address
the question of natural disasters, integrating it into development policies.
The IACNDR, chaired by the Secretary General of the OAS, has direct
access to the organizations Permanent Council.
- The General Secretariat
of the OAS, in response to the mandates of the Santa Cruz Summit on
Sustainable Development, held in Bolivia (1996), created the Inter-American
Working Group to support Member States in the implementation of an Action
Plan that includes disaster reduction. The Inter-American Working Group
for the Follow-up of the Santa Cruz Summit in turn created a Working
Group for Disaster Reduction in the Context of Development.
- The Inter-American
Commission for Sustainable Development (IACSD) adopted the Inter-American
Sustainable Development Program (IASDP), which follows the Action Plan
drafted by governments at the Santa Cruz Summit. In addition, the IACSD
established a process whereby the General Secretariat of the OAS would
inform it periodically of the progress made by different sectors of
each Member State in disaster reduction efforts.
- There are additional
hemispheric mandates arising from other summits, councils and action
groups.
Actions related to
vulnerability assessment and indexing should identify priority populations
and components of economic and social infrastructure for the Member States
in their national, international and hemispheric contexts. In its first
report, the VAI proposed a series of short, medium, and long term actions.
Among the short-term actions, the Working Group proposed the following:
- That immediately
after a natural disaster, the Permanent Council of the OAS should, if
the Member State so desires, ask the IACNDR to coordinate a multidisciplinary
work team. The team, to be financed internationally, would prepare a
vulnerability assessment report on the factors that caused the disaster.
At the same time, it would propose policies and programs to be implemented.
- That the OAS General
Assembly should declare schools and hospitals as priority infrastructure
components, and that these should receive the necessary national and
international investment to reduce human casualties. If schools and
hospitals happen to be located in a disaster zone, investment should
be directed to guarantee the continuity of services and components.
Among medium-term
actions, the VAI recommended:
- That the OAS General
Assembly promote multisectoral and multidisciplinary meetings at the
hemispheric level, e.g. the Inter-American Commission for Sustainable
Development. These meetings would support the development of vulnerability
assessment and indexing as part of their agenda.
- That the OAS General
Assembly recommend that social investment funds of Member States be
assigned to the preparation of vulnerability assessments and indexing
as a necessary step for disaster reduction.
- That the OAS General
Assembly ask Member States to establish mechanisms for the productive
sectors to include vulnerability assessment and indexing in their agendas,
in order to help reduce the impact of natural disasters.
The long-term recommendation
is that the OAS General Assembly call on each sector to create and implement
mechanisms through which a certain percentage of investment funds are
used to upgrade existing infrastructure in line with the priorities established
by vulnerability assessment and indexing processes. Part of these funds
should also be set aside for new infrastructure projects that contemplate
acceptable levels of risk.
Vulnerability assessment
and indexing in response to threats posed by natural disasters is an evolving
process that plays an important role in disaster preparedness and response,
and in the financing of disaster reduction initiatives.
Natural Disaster
Preparedness And Response Working Group Inter-American Committee
For Natural Disaster Reduction
During the first meeting
of the Inter-American Committee for Natural Disaster Reduction (IACNDR),
the Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS) established
three Working Groups. He invited the Pan American Health Organization
(PAHO/WHO) to chair the Natural Disaster Preparedness and Response Working
Group (PRWG).
The first meeting
of the Working Group was held under the coordination of PAHO with the
active participation of international and Inter-American multilateral
agencies, government agencies and non-governmental organizations. It was
determined that the objectives of the Working Group would be the following:
- Supplying the
Inter-American Committee for Natural Disaster Reduction (IACNDR) with
strategic recommendations for improving the response of the Inter-American
System to natural disasters, by strengthening local response to disasters
in Latin America and the Caribbean, with the active participation of
civil society and the private and public sectors.
- Improving the
quality and usefulness of foreign aid by using standardized tools for
the management of humanitarian supplies, carrying out joint field assessments,
and disseminating information.
- Providing advice
about mechanisms for coordinating the potential contribution of the
Inter-American System to disaster preparedness at the national and international
levels, by leveraging the strengths of the various Inter-American agencies.
- Encouraging good
governance and accountability in each country after a disaster strikes.
The basis for the
Working Groups deliberations was Resolution No. 1682 of the OAS
General Assembly, of 7 June 1999, about the mechanisms of the OAS for
natural disaster reduction. It was decided that training, guidance, and
education are the means required to enable the Inter-American System to
have a coordinated response to catastrophic events. It is a well-known
fact that the OAS System is capable of reaching a great variety of stakeholders
and sectors, and the Working Group believes that this capacity should
be used to promote disaster prevention, mitigation, and response.
- The Group advised
the Permanent Council and Secretary General to ask the OAS and its member
states to study the feasibility of looking for resources and carrying
out an Inter-American campaign to educate emergency donors on the correct
procedures for making donations and providing humanitarian assistance,
in order to reduce the number of unneeded donations.
- They also recommended
that the OAS promote training in disaster relief coordination for the
staff of the diplomatic missions accredited to the OAS and the ministries
of External Affairs of each member country.
- The Group proposed
that military cooperation in disaster preparedness and response be placed
more firmly under civilian leadership. One way of achieving this would
be to train the armed forces in civilian humanitarian structures, for
instance by incorporating disaster management in the curriculum of the
annual course taught by the Inter-American College of Defense.
- Bearing in mind
that there have been many experiences of mutual humanitarian assistance
in the region, especially through several subregional agencies such
as CDERA and CEPREDENAC, the Working Group recommended to the IACNDR
that it document these success stories and promote mutual assistance
accords through new or existing subregional institutions or mechanisms,
and to verify that these mechanisms include disaster preparedness, joint
planning, and training components.
- Concerning donations
after a disaster, the Group concluded that donations in kind, which
may be a valuable contribution to development activities, can be inappropriate
or counterproductive in emergency situations. Therefore, the OAS should
not support the initiative of establishing regional donation warehouses
for emergencies containing used, donated or recycled equipment or items.
- Bearing in mind
that there are Donation Guidelines, these should be recognized and endorsed
throughout the region. The Group advised the IACNDR to ask the Permanent
Council and the General Assembly for their formal endorsement of the
World Health Organization (WHO) Guidelines for Drug Donations, which
have global recognition.
- The Working Group
also requested that the issue of transparency and good governance in
the management of donations be discussed, and that the Council and Assembly
endorse the demand for an integrated management approach such as that
provided by SUMA, in order to promote transparency and accountability
in the delivery and management of humanitarian assistance.
Participants also
suggested that the OAS existing information system be improved,
particularly to improve its response when a disaster take place. In order
to achieve this, they suggested that some form of liaison mechanism be
established for the swift exchange of information with other networks
in the region, such as the UN Systems ReliefWeb. One of the steps
forward so far was the greater rapprochement between the OAS and the United
Nations System since the OAS was invited to participate in the first meeting
of the Inter-agency Task Force of the International Strategy for Disaster
Reduction (ISDR), at the end of April 2000. There, the role and mandate
of the IACNDR were praised as the only regional forum of its kind. The
agencies of the Inter-American System will join the four Working Groups
that have been created by the Task Force to deal with early warning systems,
risk assessment and vulnerability indicators, the El Niño phenomenon
and climate changes, and science, telecommunications and technology.
For more information,
please contact:
Dr. Luis Jorge Pérez Calderón
Emergency Preparedness and Disaster Relief Coordination Program (PED-PAHO/WHO)
525 Twenty-third Street, N.W. Washington D.C. 20037
perezlui@paho.org
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