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LESSONS LEARNED FROM PAST NOTABLE DISASTERS MEXICO VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS

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LESSONS LEARNED FROM PAST NOTABLE DISASTERS MEXICO VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction, Vienna, Virginia, USA – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: LESSONS LEARNED FROM PAST NOTABLE DISASTERS MEXICO VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS


1
LESSONS LEARNED FROM PAST NOTABLE
DISASTERSMEXICO VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS
  • Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster
    Reduction, Vienna, Virginia, USA 

2
MEXICO
3
NATURAL HAZARDS THAT HAVE CAUSED DISASTERS IN
MEXICO
FLOODS
GOAL PROTECT PEOPLE AND COMMUNITIES
SEVERE WINDSTORMS
EARTHQUAKES
DERIVHIGH BENEFIT/COST BY BECOMING DISASTER
RESILIENT
VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS
ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGE
GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE
4
SOME OF THE 1,500 ACTIVE VOLCANOES ARE IN MEXICO
5
Natural Phenomena That Cause Disasters
  • Planet Earths heat flow causes movement of
    lithospheric plates, which causes subduction,
    which causes VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS

6
VOLCANOES
  • PART OF THE PACIFIC RING OF FIRE, MEXICO HAS
    ACTIVE VOLCANOES AS A RESULT OF COMPLEX
    SUBDUCTION OF THE COCOS PLATE BENEATH THE NORTH
    AMERICAN PLATE

7
MEXICO THE NORTH AMERICAN AND COCOS PLATES
8
MEXICOS VOLCANOES (NOTE POPOCATEPETL AND
COLIMA)
9
IMAGES OF POPOCATEPETL
  • MEXICOS BEST KNOWN ACTIVE VOLCANO AND THE SECOND
    HIGHEST VOLCANO IN NORTH AMERICA ERUPTED AS
    RECENTLY AS APRIL 17, 2013

10
POPOCATEPETL AND PIRAMID DE COCHULA
11
POPOs ERUPTION HISTORY
  • In the past centuries before European came to
    Mexico, large eruptions produced giant mud flows
    that buried Aztec settlements, and even entire
    pyramids

12
POPOs ERUPTION HISTORY
  • After almost 50 years of dormancy, "Popo" came
    back to life in 1994 and has been producing
    powerful explosions at irregular intervals since
    then.

13
VOLCANO HAZARDS CAN HAVE FAR REACHING IMPACTS
  • VERTICAL PLUME (can affect jet aircraft)
  • ASH AND TEPHRA
  • LATERAL BLAST
  • PYROCLASTIC CLOUDS, BURSTS, AND FLOWS

14
POPOCATEPETL
15
POPOCATEPETL
16
VOLCANO HAZARDS CAN HAVE FAR REACHING IMPACTS
  • LAVA FLOWS
  • LAHARS (can bury villages)
  • EARTHQUAKES (related to movement of lava)
  • VOLCANIC WINTER (causing famine and mass
    extinctions)

17
A DISASTER CAN HAPPENWHEN THE POTENTIAL
DISASTER AGENTS OF A VOLCANIC ERUPTION INTERACT
WITH MEXICOS COMMUNITIES
18
AN ERUPTION OF POPOCATEPETL (AKA POPO)
WOULD IMPACT NEARBY MEXICO CITY AND PUEBLA
  • LOCATED 50 KM AWAY, 20 MILLION PEOIPLE ARE AT
    RISK

19
MEXICO CITY, POPO AND AN AIRPLANE
20
POPOCATEPETL
21
CAUSES OF RISK
LATERAL BLAST
PYROCLASTIC FLOWS
FLYING DEBRIS
VOLCANIC ASH
VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS
LAVA FLOWS
CASE HISTORIES
LAHARS
TOXIC GASES
22
LIKELY IMPACTS BASED ON POPOs ERUPTION HISTORY
  • The pyroclastic mud flows can firm up like
    concrete once they stop, ruining farmland and,
    because they are difficult to remove, disrupting
    life in communities.

23
LIKELY IMPACTS
  • Ash can be especially harmful and even deadly to
    people who are unable to evacuate.
  • Ash can also be deadly to livestock, on which the
    residents livelihood may depend.

24
LIKELY ECONOMIC IMPACTS
  • Air traffic may disrupt the economy for long
    periods if the ash clouds intersect the routes of
    jet aircraft and are a threat to safety.

25
LIKELY ECONOMIC IMPACTS
  • A new major eruption of Popocatepetl would likely
    have a devastating economic impact on local
    residents who may be subsistence farmers and some
    of the poorest of the poor.
  • Ash would be especially deadly to people and
    livestock (on which livelihoods depend), and a
    potential disaster for jet aircraft.

26
IMAGES OF COLIMA
  • Colima is not one, but two different volcanoes,
    the oldest one called Nevado de Colima, that is
    located about 450 km (270 mi) west of Mexico City

27
COLIMA
28
COLIMA
  • The Volcán de Colima, also known as Volcán de
    Fuego, is part of the Colima volcanic complex
    consisting of Volcán de Colima and Nevado de
    Colima.
  • The youngest of the two, it is currently one of
    the most active volcanoes in Mexico and North
    America, erupting more than 40 times since 1576

29
THE ALTERNATIVE TO A VOLCANIC--ERUPTION
DISASTER ISVOLCANO DISASTER RESILIENCE
30
A DISASTER is ---
  • --- the set of failures that overwhelm the
    capability of a community to respond without
    external help  when three continuums 1)  people,
    2) community (i.e., a set of habitats,
    livelihoods, and social constructs), and 3)
    complex events (e.g., VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS,)
    intersect at a point in space and time.

31
Disasters are caused by single- or
multiple-event natural hazards that, (for
various reasons), cause extreme levels of
mortality, morbidity, homelessness, joblessness,
economic losses, or environmental impacts.
32
THE REASONS ARE . . .
  • When it does happen, the functions of the
    communitys buildings and infrastructure can be
    LOST for long periods.

33
THE REASONS ARE . . .
  • The community is UN-PREPARED for what will likely
    happen, not to mention the low-probability of
    occurrencehigh-probability of adverse
    consequences event.

34
THE REASONS ARE . . .
  • The community has NO DISASTER PLANNING SCENARIO
    or WARNING SYSTEM in place as a strategic
    framework for early threat identification and
    coordinated local, national, regional, and
    international countermeasures.

35
THE REASONS ARE . . .
  • The community LACKS THE CAPACITY TO RESPOND in
    a timely and effective manner to the full
    spectrum of expected and unexpected emergency
    situations.

36
THE REASONS ARE . . .
  • The community is INEFFICIENT during recovery and
    reconstruction because it HAS NOT LEARNED from
    either the current experience or the cumulative
    prior experiences.

37
MEXICOS COMMUNITIES
DATA BASES AND INFORMATION
HAZARDS GROUND SHAKING GROUND FAILURE
SURFACE FAULTING TECTONIC DEFORMATION TSUNAMI RUN
UP AFTERSHOCKS
38
LESSONS LEARNED ABOUT DISASTER RESILIENCE
  • School children and adults need masks to counter
    adverse health effects of breathing volcanic ash.

39
LESSONS LEARNED ABOUT DISASTER RESILIENCE
  • Volcanic ash ruins crops and vegetation and
    disrupts aviation.

40
LESSONS LEARNED ABOUT DISASTER RESILIENCE
  • Although a complex activity, timely evacuation is
    essential for volcano disaster resilience

41
AIR AND LAND MONITORING TECHNOLOGIES ARE VITAL
  • .

42
LESSONS LEARNED ABOUT DISASTER RESILIENCE
  • ALL VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS
  • RESTORATION TO NORMAL AND RECOVERY USUALLY
    TAKE LONGER THAN THOUGHT.
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