Title: World at risk
1Geography Edexcel AS
2Hazards Contents
- Types of hazards
- Key Terms
- Risks and Vulnerability
- Natural Hazard or Disaster?
- Is the world becoming more hazardous?
- Human factors
- Falling Deaths
- Increasing Numbers of people affected
- El Nino La Nina
- Distributions Earthquakes, Volcanoes, Slides,
Drought, Storms - Hazard Hotspots California, Philippines -
Compared
3What is a hazard?
- Every year many events around the world happen
that may be described as natural hazards - For a natural event or phenomena to become a
hazard it has to involve people - It is the way that social systems and
environments link together that determines
whether an event becomes a hazard - What is a natural event in an uninhabited
location can be a severe hazard in another place
where people are involved - Definition?
- A natural hazard is a natural event or process
which affects people eg causing loss of life or
injury, economic damage, disruption to peoples
lives or environmental degradation.
4Hazards Two Types of hazards
- Caused by running water and its processes (hydro)
and those associated with weather patterns
(meteorological) - Includes floods, debris and mudflows
- Tropical cyclone/hurricane, storm surges, thunder
and hail storms, tornadoes, blizzards and other
sever storm - Droughts , bush fires temperature extremes, sand
and dust storms - Read p 6-8 Pearson
- Caused by earth processes.
- They can be caused by either internal earth
processes of tectonic activity eg volcanoes,
earthquakes, tsunamis - Or by external processes of geomorphological
origin involving mass movement eg landslides,
rockfalls, rockslides - Read P 9-11 Pearson
5Both geophysical and hydro-meteorological?
- These two types of hazard sometimes overlap
- Eg a snow avalanche may be hydro-meteorological(sn
ow-ice) in origin, but geophysical as an event
(mass movement) - Eg a landslide
- CAN GLOBAL WARMING BE SEEN AS A NATURAL HAZARD?
6a)Which of these ten are hazards then? b)Are
they hydrological, meteorological,
geomorphological or tectonic?
- 1. A cyclone affecting Hong Kong
- 2. A hurricane passing over a remote unpopulated
island - 3. A flood in a rural area which floods the
roads, but does not affect any houses - 4. A volcano erupting in isolation in the
middles of the Pacific ocean - 5. An avalanche in a ski resort
- 6. An avalanche high on the mountain slopes
remote from any settlement - 7. A tsunami wave 50cm high off the coast of
Japan - 8. An earthquake in Kashmir, Northern Pakistan
- 9. A drought in Australias outback
- 10. A landslide in a favela in Rio
-
7- Na-tech or quasi-natural hazards- where natural
hazards trigger a technological hazard eg
flooding causes a dam to burst - Techno hazards technological hazards such as
Chernobyl power plant exploding - Chronic hazards such as global warming and
el-nino/la nina may increase the threat of other
environmental hazards eg sea level rise increases
the risk of coastal floods - Super hazards catastrophic Earth changes from
super volcanoes, tsunamis and asteroid strikes - Context hazards widespread (global) threat due
to environmental factors such as climate change
or a super volcano.
8Environmental and context hazards
9Hazards Key Terms
- Disasters are the realisation of the hazard to
cause social impacts such as loss of livelihoods,
lives and economic impact such as damage to
goods and property. - It especially occurs in areas where environments
and people are vulnerable. - Vulnerability is a high risk combined with an
inability of individuals and communities to cope.
10How a hazard becomes a disaster Dreggs model
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12- Dreggs model shows how some kind of overlap is
needed for a hazard to become a disaster. - A disaster is a matter of scale it is simply
bigger than a natural hazard. - In 1990 Swiss Re insurance defined a disaster as
an event that where at least 20 people died, or
insured damage of over 16 million US dollars was
caused. - But values and currencies change all the time!
- It depends on how vulnerable the people are that
are exposed to it. - More of the worlds population are living in
areas where they are exposed to hazards eg
Bangladesh ( to floods and cyclones), favelas in
Brazil (to landslides) - The greater the scale of the natural hazard and
the more exposed the people are, the greater the
disaster is likely to be.
13How a disaster becomes a hazard (Philip Allan)
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16Hazards Vulnerability
- Shaped by underlying state of human development,
includes inequalities in income, opportunity and
political power. - Poverty stricken people often depend upon the
land for food, live in poor eco-systems and have
poor health. - The result of this is that high risk is combined
with inability to cope with the adverse impact of
natural hazards and climate change.
17Hazards Natural Hazard or Disaster?
- A natural disaster is the effect of a natural
hazard (e.g., flood, tornado, hurricane, volcanic
eruption, earthquake, or landslide). It leads to
financial, environmental or human losses. The
resulting loss depends on the vulnerability of
the affected population to resist the hazard,
also called their resilience
- The actual or potential interaction between
extreme natural events and human activities that
may result in damage, disruption, death or injury
18Risk
- Risk is the exposure of people to a hazardous
event and the process of establishing the
probability that a hazard event of a particular
magnitude will occur within a given period. - The types of risk in order of reduced severity
are - Hazards to people death, severe injury,
disease, stress - Hazards to goods economic losses,
infrastructure damage, property damage - Hazards to environment pollution, loss of flora
and fauna, loss of amenity - Exposure to a hazard is not always avoidable.
People may place themselves at risk! See p. 5
Philip Allan
19Risk why do people remain exposed to hazards?
- UNPREDICTABILITY
- Not always predictable when or where an event
will take place. Also difficult to know the
likely magnitude of the event. - Human activity and physical changes also mean
that for example sea level is rising giving a
greater chance of lowlands flooding. Moreover
deforestation of drainage basins increase the
frequency and magnitude of flooding. - LACK OF ALTERNATIVES
- Difficult to uproot and move to another location
giving up homes, land and employment. Often the
worlds most vulnerable are the poor who are
forced to live on unsafe floodplains or steep
hillsides. - CHANGING LEVELS OF RISK
- Deforestation can make an area once safe from
flooding more susceptible. As can the effects of
global warming eg sea level rise - RUSSIAN ROULETTE
- Optimism, turning a blind eye, acts of god,
part of the living process. People are comforted
by the statistics which show that the risk of
death is lower than that from influenza or car
accidents. They also believe that if a high
magnitude event occurs then it may be safe for a
few years, this is not always true. - COST V. BENEFIT
- Many hazardous areas offer advantages that in
peoples minds outweigh the risk. Flood plains
for example have very fertile soils and rich
volcanic soils are also attractive.
20The risk perception process
21Vulnerability quadrant (Philip Allan)
22Hazards Measuring Risk (p 7 Philip Allan and p
12 Pearson)
- Frequency or magnitude of hazard (H) x
vulnerability (V) - Risk (R)
- Capacity to cope
or adapt (C)
23The risks are getting worse in some countries
because 1. the frequency is increasing with
climate change. 2. Vulnerability is increasing
as a result of unsustainable development leading
to poor land use and environmental degradation.
3. The capacity to cope is decreasing owing to
poverty and urbanisation. Risks are lower in
more developed countries because they have
resources and technology to provide protection.
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26A year of wild weather2011 or 2010
- 1. Redo the hazards diary case study, updating it
for either 2011 or 2010. You should try to extend
the columns to include geophysical hazards, and
if you want the higher grades, Na-tech, techno
and chronic hazards as well. - 2. Overall whats the worst hazard and why?
- 3. Crucially, make sure you include the basic
impacts and death tolls if appropriate to help
back-up your point for the previous question. You
can then refer to these in preparation for the
June exams. -
27- Use the case study example (p11 Philip Allan) as
a guide for what you need to do here. - MunichRe Reports will help you, as will bits of
other research on the BBC News website (e.g. type
in volcano / earthquake etc), or GoogleNews.