Disaster Management
-
Upload
lokhaze-ali -
Category
Business
-
view
3.515 -
download
0
Transcript of Disaster Management
![Page 1: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Disaster Management
![Page 2: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/2.jpg)
Disaster Management 2
Thought of the Day
“KUN FAYAKUN” �ْن� ُك �وُن� �ُك َف�َي
is an Arabic phrase in QuranIt means The Lord says “Be, and it is”
![Page 3: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/3.jpg)
Disaster Management 3
TermsCapacity• A combination of all the strengths and resources available within a
community, society or organization that can reduce the level of risk, or the effects of a disaster.
Disaster• A serious disruption of the functioning of a community or society causing
widespread human, material, economic or environmental losses which exceed the ability of the affected community or society to cope using its own resources. It results from the combination of hazards, conditions of vulnerability and insufficient capacity to reduce the potential negative consequences of risk.
Disaster risk management (DRM)• The comprehensive approach to reduce the adverse impacts of a disaster.
DRM encompasses all actions taken before, during, and after the disasters. It includes activities on mitigation, preparedness, emergency response, recovery, rehabilitation, and reconstruction.
![Page 4: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/4.jpg)
Disaster Management 4
TermsDisaster risk reduction (DRR)/disaster reduction• The measures aimed to minimize vulnerabilities and disaster risks throughout a
society, to avoid (prevention) or to limit (mitigation and preparedness) the adverse impacts of hazards, within the broad context of sustainable development.
Early warning• The provision of timely and effective information, through identified
institutions, to communities and individuals so that they can take action to reduce their risks and prepare for effective response.
Emergency• An event, usually sudden, that puts at risk the life or well being of at least one
person.Forecast• Estimate of the occurrence of a future event (UNESCO, WMO). This term is used
with different meanings in different disciplines.
![Page 5: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/5.jpg)
Disaster Management 5
TermsMeteorological disaster• Disasters resulting from meteorological phenomena, such as floods, cyclones,
droughts, glacial lake outbursts, landslides due to heavy rain and avalanches.Risk assessment/analysis• A methodology to determine the nature and extent of risk by analyzing
potential hazards and evaluating existing vulnerability that could pose a potential threat to people, property, livelihoods and the environment.
Sustainable development• Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the
ability of future generations to meet their own needs.Vulnerability• The conditions determined by physical, social, economic and environmental
factors or processes, which increase the susceptibility of a community or society to the impact of hazards.
![Page 6: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/6.jpg)
Disaster Management 6
CATASTROPHE
“… any natural or manmade incident, including terrorism, that results in extraordinary levels of mass casualties, damage, or disruption severely affecting the population, infrastructure, environment, economy, national morale, and/or government functions.”
![Page 7: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/7.jpg)
Disaster Management 7
Continuum of Magnitude
Emergency Disaster Catastrophe Extinction Level Event
![Page 8: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/8.jpg)
Disaster Management 8
Resilience
Resilience is the ability of a system, community or society exposed to hazards to resist, absorb, accommodate and recover from the effects of a hazard in a timely and efficient manner, including through the preservation and restoration of its essential basic structures.
![Page 9: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/9.jpg)
Disaster Management 9
Disaster is an Opportunity
![Page 10: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/10.jpg)
Disaster Management 10
Rising Exposure to Cyclones and Hurricanes, 2000-2050
![Page 11: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/11.jpg)
Disaster Management 11
Strategic Emergency Management Plan (SEMP)
The inner circle includes all of the elements that influence the development of the SEMP,such as:• updates of environmental scans;• ongoing/regular all-hazards risk assessments;• engaged leadership;• regular training;• regular exercises; and• a Capability Improvement Process (CAIP)—the whole-of-government approach to the collection and analysis of government response for exercises and real events
![Page 12: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/12.jpg)
Disaster Management 12
The Planning Context
• EM-Related Plans• SEMP• Operational plans• Regional EM plans• Regional operational
plans• Security plans• Business continuity plans• Inter-agency plans
![Page 13: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/13.jpg)
Disaster Management 13
The Planning Context
• Assessments• Environmental scans• Criticality assessments
including data on critical infrastructure
• Business impact analyses• Threat assessments• Vulnerability assessments• Risk assessments• All-hazards risk
assessments
![Page 14: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/14.jpg)
Disaster Management 14
Disaster Risk Management Framework
![Page 15: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/15.jpg)
Disaster Management 15
Core Response Management Systems
• Core response management systems are similar for most disaster types.
• It reduces confusion if all responses have the same basic organization.
• It’s less expensive.
![Page 16: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/16.jpg)
Disaster Management 16
Challenges to Decision Making vs Basic Goals
Challenges to Decision Making • Where Uncomfortable Officials • Meet in Unfamiliar Surroundings• To Play Unaccustomed Roles• Making Unpopular Decisions• Based on Inadequate Information• And in Much Too Little Time
Basic GoalsStanding Orders for All Disasters:• Establish/re-establish
communication with affected area.
• Secure and complete search and rescue.
• Meet basic human needs for medical treatment, water, food, shelter, and emergency fuels
• Restore critical infrastructure.• Open schools and local
businesses.• Begin the recovery.
![Page 17: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/17.jpg)
Disaster Management 17
Pakistan Earthquake - Oct 2005A Snapshot Of Scale And Magnitude• Magnitude : 7.6 on the Richter Scale - 30,000 sq Km• Affected Area : 30,000 sq Km (Nine Districts – Inhospitable Terrain)• Human Loss : 73,338 Dead and &128,304 Severely Injured• Physical Loss:
– 3 .5 Million Rendered Homeless, over 600,000 Houses Destroyed– 5,344 Education Facilities Destroyed– 307 Health Facilities Destroyed– 715 Government Sector Buildings Damaged– 2,393 Km Roads Damaged
• The Challenge :– Reconstruction and Rehabilitation of Destroyed Infrastructure (Over 12,000 Projects)– Renewal of Livelihood, Protection of Environment, Re-establishment of Telecom and Power
Networks and Rehabilitation of Vulnerable Population– Clearance of Massive Slides and Tons of Rubble
• Colossal Economic Loss Leaving Behind a Reconstruction Bill of over US$ 5 billion
![Page 18: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/18.jpg)
Disaster Management 18
Pakistan Earthquake - Oct 2005
![Page 19: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/19.jpg)
Disaster Management 19
• The earthquake in Haiti• 12th Jan 2010• left 1.5 million
homeless • killed 149,095 people of
which 6300 died in a potentially preventable cholera outbreak which infected a further 450,000 residents
Haiti Earthquake 2010
![Page 20: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/20.jpg)
Disaster Management 20
Floods in Pakistan 2010
• Floods in Pakistan• July to August 2010• affected 20 million
people and destroyed health facilities
![Page 21: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/21.jpg)
Disaster Management 21
Famine in Africa 2011• The famine in Africa in 2011 • affected 10 million people across
several countries• Large population displacement created
additional public health challenges to areas that have poorly developed health systems
• lack disaster preparedness• Immediate priorities included –
provision of water, sanitation, shelter• trained staff to address widespread
acute malnutrition• surveillance for outbreaks• vaccine programs for preventable
diseases• funding• inter-agency coordination
![Page 22: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/22.jpg)
Disaster Management 22
Earthquake & Tsunami Japan 2011• The earthquake and tsunami in Japan• 11th March 2011• caused destruction of healthcare
facilities• Initial shortages of food• Water• Fuel• aid materials • rescue teams to the affected rural
population• 400,000 people were evacuated to
shelters with no heating in freezing temperatures
• Japan had invested in disaster management
• had created a more resilient health system which continued to function in spite of the challenges
![Page 23: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/23.jpg)
Disaster Management 23
World’s Costliest Disasters
![Page 24: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/24.jpg)
Disaster Management 24
Economic and Insured Losses
![Page 25: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/25.jpg)
Disaster Management 25
Overall and Insured Losses from Catastrophes
![Page 26: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/26.jpg)
Disaster Management 26
Economic Losses due to Natural Catastrophes
![Page 27: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/27.jpg)
Disaster Management 27
Major Disasters since 2010
![Page 28: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/28.jpg)
Disaster Management 28
Disasters Affect Everyone
![Page 29: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/29.jpg)
Disaster Management 29
![Page 30: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/30.jpg)
Disaster Management 30
Public Health Emergency Preparedness
The capability of the public health and health-care systems, communities, and individuals to prevent, protect against, quickly respond to, and recover from health emergencies, particularly those whose scale, timing, or unpredictability threatens to overwhelm routine capabilities
![Page 31: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
Disaster Management 31
Health System Priorities in All-Hazards Disaster Management WHO
1. Leadership and governance
• International, national and cross-boundary systems of governance, coordination and response for all hazards disasters
2. Health workforce• Public health training in disaster
management and evaluation
3. Medical products, vaccines and technology• Stockpiling disaster-related
medications and equipment, and their distribution
4. Health information• Communications – inter-agency,
two-way with the public and the role of the media as part of disaster management strategy
5. Health financing• Health finance system and disaster
management funding issues
6. Service delivery• Community preparedness
strategies to increase community resilience
![Page 32: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
Disaster Management 32
The Complexity Paradigm
• disaster management problems in the future will be more complex
• population growth• climate change• regulatory requirements• short-term thinking
must be rejected• planning over longer
time horizons
![Page 33: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/33.jpg)
Disaster Management 33
The Uncertainty Paradigm
• uncertainty in time and space
• uncertainty caused by inherent variability of physical components
• uncertainty caused by a fundamental lack of knowledge
• decrease in disaster data availability
![Page 34: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/34.jpg)
Disaster Management 34
Sources of Uncertainty
![Page 35: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/35.jpg)
Disaster Management 35
Integrated Disaster Management
Integrated disaster management is an iterative process of decision making regarding prevention of, response to, and recovery from, a disaster.
![Page 36: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/36.jpg)
Disaster Management 36
INTEGRATED DISASTER MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES
Mitigation • long-term planning• identifying vulnerability of
every part of the territory to particular types of hazards
• identification of steps that should be taken to minimize the risks
• proactive measures taken before an emergency or disaster occurs
Steps can include:• modifying building codes
to ensure buildings can withstand earthquake and high winds
• forbidding building on land that is prone to flooding
• Identification of evacuation procedures
![Page 37: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/37.jpg)
Disaster Management 37
INTEGRATED DISASTER MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES
Land Use Planning and Management• Promoting appropriate land
use for local conditions • keeps people and property
out of hazardous areas• provides more affordable
housing and living conditions,
• protects the environment • reduces the costs of growth
and development
![Page 38: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/38.jpg)
Disaster Management 38
INTEGRATED DISASTER MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES
Engineering• state-of-the-art
engineering approaches • reducing mortality rates
from hazards and disasters
![Page 39: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/39.jpg)
Disaster Management 39
INTEGRATED DISASTER MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES
Building Codes and Standards• quality of buildings and
infrastructure is directly related to loss of life
• Injuries• financial costs of
disasters• disaster-resilient
construction
Building codes provide the minimum acceptable requirements necessary(a) to preserve the public
safety, health, and welfare
(b) to protect the property and the built environment
![Page 40: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/40.jpg)
Disaster Management 40
INTEGRATED DISASTER MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES
Prediction, Forecast, and Warning• effective warning
system comprises four elements
• Failure in any one part can mean failure of the whole system
1. Risk knowledge phase• systematic data collection
and risk assessments2. Monitoring phase• development of hazard
monitoring and early warning services
3. Dissemination and communication phase 4. Response capability development phase
![Page 41: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/41.jpg)
Disaster Management 41
INTEGRATED DISASTER MANAGEMENT ACTIVITIES
Insurance• now available for some
but not all natural disasters
• now available for some but not all natural disasters
![Page 42: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/42.jpg)
Disaster Management 42
Preparedness
• formulating, testing, and exercising disaster plans
• providing training for disaster responders and the general public
• communicating with the public and others about disaster vulnerability
![Page 43: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/43.jpg)
Disaster Management 43
Response
• emergency sheltering• search and rescue• care of injured• damage assessment • emergency measures• coordination• communications• ongoing situation
assessment• resource mobilization
during emergency period14,500 meals ready to eat15,000 liters of water by air
![Page 44: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/44.jpg)
Disaster Management 44
Recovery
• Reconstruction• Restoration• Rehabilitation• Post disaster
development
![Page 45: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/45.jpg)
Disaster Management 45
Disaster Management Acts
• Emergency Management Act
• National Disaster Mitigation Strategy
• Joint Emergency Preparedness Program
• Emergency Response
![Page 46: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/46.jpg)
Disaster Management 46
Systems Thinking and IntegratedDisaster Management
• What is a System?• S : X → Y• X is an input vector and
Y is an output vector• a system is a set of
operations that transforms input vector X into output vector Y
![Page 47: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/47.jpg)
Disaster Management 47
Systems Approach to Disaster Management
• SIMULATION1. Development of a model of the system,2. Operation of the model 3. Observation and interpretation of the resulting outputs
• SYSTEM DYNAMICS SIMULATION• understanding the system and its
boundaries• identifying the key variables• describing the processes that affect
variables through mathematical relationships,
• mapping the structure of the model, and• simulating the model for understanding its
behavior
![Page 48: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/48.jpg)
Disaster Management 48
Systems Approach to Disaster Management
• OPTIMIZATION• MULTIOBJECTIVE ANALYSIS• DISASTER RISK MANAGEMENT• Risk analysis, Disaster prevention and
Preparedness for disaster
• COMPUTER SUPPORT: DECISION SUPPORT SYSTEMS (DSS)
• Problem identification, Problem formulation, “What If” capability (adaptability), Use of analytical models (facilitation), Use of graphics ( fast response)
![Page 49: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/49.jpg)
Disaster Management 49
Evacuation
![Page 50: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/50.jpg)
Disaster Management 50
The Environmental Health Shelter Assessment Tool
The Environmental Health Shelter Assessment Tool is intended to• Serve as a standardized instrument
for rapidly assessing environmental health conditions in shelter facilities
• Assist in identifying and prioritizing health and safety issues in shelters
• Provide shelter management officials with data and an assessment of environmental health conditions and recommendations for improvement
• Capture data and create documentation for use in future planning and improvement of shelters
![Page 51: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/51.jpg)
Disaster Management 51
Supply Chain Management
![Page 52: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/52.jpg)
Disaster Management 52
Disaster Risks
![Page 53: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/53.jpg)
Disaster Management 53
Vulnerability Conceptual Framework
![Page 54: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/54.jpg)
Disaster Management 54
Process Stages in Vulnerability Assessment
![Page 55: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/55.jpg)
Disaster Management 55
Shifting Approaches In Disaster Management Bangladesh
• Institutional Restructuring to Reflect a Shift in Disaster Management
• Increasing roles and responsibilities of NGOs
• Developments in the Institutional Framework: Introduction to the Comprehensive Disaster Management Plan (CDMP)
• Shift from relief and response to disaster risk management
![Page 56: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/56.jpg)
Disaster Management 56
ISSUES IN FUTURE DISASTER MANAGEMENT
• Climate Change• Temperature Extremes• Precipitation Extremes • Drought• Tropical Cyclones• Severe Weather Events• Sea-Level Rise• Glacial Lake Outburst Floods (GLOF)
![Page 57: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/57.jpg)
Disaster Management 57
Integrated Environmental Observation Network
![Page 58: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/58.jpg)
Disaster Management 58
Tsunami Early Warning Systems
![Page 59: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/59.jpg)
Disaster Management 59
NOAA GOES-13 satellite showing Hurricane Irene on August 25, 2011 at 10:10 a.m.
![Page 60: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/60.jpg)
Disaster Management 60
Simulation Models Category 2 Storm
![Page 61: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/61.jpg)
Disaster Management 61
Green vs. Gray Infrastructure Costs
![Page 62: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/62.jpg)
Disaster Management 62
FEMA Trailer Types
![Page 63: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/63.jpg)
Disaster Management 63
Building America Structural Insulated Panel (BASIP) Homes
![Page 64: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/64.jpg)
Disaster Management 64
Katrina & Kernel Cottages
![Page 65: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/65.jpg)
Disaster Management 65
Three dimensional map rendition of flooding event-Purdue University
![Page 66: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/66.jpg)
Disaster Management 66
Satellite ImageVolcanic Eruption
![Page 67: Disaster Management](https://reader037.fdocuments.us/reader037/viewer/2022110306/55492e4bb4c9054c498c1c9b/html5/thumbnails/67.jpg)
Disaster Management 67
Thank You