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ADVANCES AND TRENDS IN EARLY WARNING DEVELOPMENT RREGIONAL ADVANCES AND TRENDS A. Africa region  sub-regional food security, climate, flood, drought early warning systems  disaster management platforms in several countries;  comprehensive disaster reduction strategies (e.g. NEPAD) B. Asia region  hazard forecasting capacity and capability  access to warning information   use of hazard mapping in risk assessment rerevising hydrometeorological warning systems  C.      American Hemisphere floods and various windstorms systems most advanced varied methodologies and configurations of stakeholders landslide, earthquakes, climate change and El Nino warning systems least developed satellite-based systems extended to forest fire systems D.      Europe region provision and accuracy of warnings; hazard prediction practice of flood early warning climate change research internet for warning information and communication satellite communication system for natural hazards            EXAMPLES OF HAZARD-SPECIFIC ADVANCES AND TRENDS   A ·        Flood forecasted rainfall and run-off models not good enough improvement of predictability of forecasts social marketing approach to public awareness and preparedness basic infrastructure for flood forecasting in developing countries      B    Drought no fully operational drought early warning systems exist slow progress in developing drought monitoring capabilities about 60 UNCCD National Action Programmes (NAPs) C    Geological hazards progress in developing seismic hazard assessment no reliable system exists for earthquakes/volcano eruptions emphasizing mitigation and preparedness measures  D    Climate understanding and predict climate change and variability causes climate warning systems: part of integrated adaptation strategies        THEMATIC ADVANCES AND TRENDS                      increasing vulnerability to disasters longer lead times more use of seasonal forecasting application of information communication technologies… …is creating some communication and response problems growing focus on institutionalizing early warning balancing enforcement with self consent less focus on details of warning messages rising public expectations regarding warning services regionalism and early warning development OBSTACLES: CONSTRAINTS, GAPS, WEAKNESSES  A.  Common constraints                weak national focus on warning inadequate resource, especially at local level persistence of disaster response outlook unclear definitions of concepts, procedures, responsibilities inadequate user orientation of early warning systems inadequate land use planning weak trans-boundary and international cooperation  B Developing countries                low financial resources and technical expertise deteriorating state of monitoring infrastructure weak communication sub-systems low application of early warning in response activities inadequate warning coverage of localized and other threats weak governance, institutional factors & political commitment inadequate external support  C. Developed countries              inadequate identification and attention to residual risk determination of acceptable public risk weak legal foundation in common law countries insufficient reliability of longer term flood forecasting low outcomes of warning services & community engagement inadequate monitoring and measurement of success LESSONS AND POINTERS    • • • • • • • • • A Common global lessons · warning is a component of risk management · effective warning requires sound basic infrastructure… · …but not necessarily a lot of money or technology · early warning systems need to be well managed · good preparedness is essential for effective warning · participation/partnerships/community involvement are crucial · sound communication is critical for effective warning · pre-event education makes warning response effective · warning systems must be based on continuous learning regionalism is essential for developing warning systems  B. Lessons peculiar to developing countries         · multi-purpose monitoring is required for vulnerability warning · the scope of warning systems needs to cover other hazards · drought and desertification monitoring is a long-term process · formal systems must integrate traditional indicators/languages · early warning of conflicts are often pointers to natural disasters · assured funding is crucial for sustainability of warning systems new approaches to capacity development are needed INTEGRATING EARLY WARNING INTO PUBLIC POLICY: MAJOR NEEDS   A. Developing countries           establishing and enforcing guidelines/operating procedures  developing institutional capacity of early warning bodies  streamlining mandates of various warning institutions  adopting the participatory and decentralized approach  expanding data and information sharing between different levels  creating public awareness on early warning  improving monitoring of early warning systems  increasing budgetary support for early warning development  B. Developed countries         · improving warning database, including technologies · targeting warnings at specific at-risk groups  strengthening information exchanges  clearly identifying functions and responsibilities  developing risk assessment and management skills  maintaining community awareness and response  addressing emerging issues (e.g. privatization, climate change) INTEGRATING EARLY WARNING INTO PUBLIC POLICY: PRIORITY RECOMMENDATION   A. Common recommendations 1. Support integration of disaster risk management, including early warning, into development processes and policies: harmonize early warning concepts, terminologies and data complement non-structural and structural measures facilitate public/private partnerships motivate strong long-term political commitment show cost-benefit and positive results of early warning                 2. Support capacity development, particularly in developing countries:  train people involved in early warning and risk management  provide of equipment needs  strengthen early warning data and information systems     3. Develop people-centered warning systems:  develop community-based early warning systems  improve public awareness    4. Improve data collection and availability:  modernize and expand hazard monitoring infrastructure  exchanging information   5. Implement Conference recommendations through a UN/ISDR-coordinated international early warning platform and programme B. Recommendations for developing countries 1. 2. 3. Develop warning systems for additional or emerging hazards Maintain and strengthen international collaboration Develop regional disaster reduction institutions C. Recommendations for developed countries  1. 2.  3. De-emphasise regulatory approaches and enforcement Create standards for new technologies & warning dissemination Be more aware of implications of privatization for early warning