Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Global Hazards
- Context hazard - Widespread
- Geophysical hazard - a hazard formed by tectonic/geological hazrd
- Hydro-metorological hazard - A hazard formed by hydrological and atmospheric processes
- Disaster - A hazard becoming reality
- Risk Equation - H x V / C
- Frequency/Magnitude of Hazard
- Use of fossil fuels is warming the planet
- The resulting change in climate is
increasing the frequency anad
severity of wealther-related hazards
- Expanding the range of disease carriers
- Level of Vulnerability
- Hazards become disasters only when people get in the way
- Unsustainable development
involves poor land use and
environmental degradition
- This is increasing the vulnerability of millions
- Increased population density increases vulnerability
- Capacity to cope
- Communities need skills, tools and money
to cope with the effects of climate change
- Debt repayments, unfair trade arrangements, selective
foreign investment, and rich countries directing aid
funds towards politically strategic regions ratehr than
the most needy. Which means that the poor and
vulnerable communities lack these resources
- Rural-urban migration is
also undermining traditional
coping strategies
- Risk
- To people
- Death
- Severe
injury
- Disease
- Stress
- To goods
- Economic losses
- Infrastructure damage
- Property damage
- To the environment
- Pollution
- Loss of flora and fauna
- Loss of
amenity
- Changing
risks
- Difficult to predict when or
where an event may occur or
what the magnitude will be
- Natural hazards vary in space as well
as time because of changing human
activities and changing physical factors
- The rise in sea level
means that low-lying
coastal plains that were
once safe places to live
are now more prone to
storm surge and floods
- Deforestation of
watersheds leads to less
interception of rain and
more flashy hydrographs,
increasing the frequency
and magnitude of flood
events
- Lack of
Alternatives
- Often the world's
poorest, most
vulnerable people are
forced to live in unsafe
locations such as
hillsides or floodplains,
or regions subject to
drought
- Shortage of land
- Lack of knowledge
of better alternatives
- Benefits versus costs
- People may subconsciously weight up the benefits
versus the costs of living in high-risk areas
- The benefits of
fertile farming land
on the flanks of a
volcano may
outweigh the risks
of an eruption
- Risk
perception
- People tend to be optimistic about the risk of hazards occuring
- People are comforted by
statistics that show that the
risk of death from a hazard
event is far lower than that
from influenza or car accidents
- People believe if a high magnitude hazard has
occured then they will be safe for the next few years
- The greenhouse effect
- Natural phenomenon
- Greenhouse gases -
Water Vapor, Methane,
Carbon Dioxide,
Nitrous Oxide and ozone
- GHG absorb some of the outgoing
longwave radiation from Earth and
send some of it back to the Earth's
surface which is warmed