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Disaster-prone communities should help plan infrastructure to weather storms

BANGKOK (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Disaster-prone communities should be involved in planning their infrastructure to help ensure basic services can weather storms, floods and other disasters, researchers said.

Floods can contaminate drinking water with sewage, storms can knock down power lines and drought can shut down hydropower plants, the researchers, from six Asian countries, said at a meeting in Bangkok.

Power outages can be critical at hospitals, and cause hardship in sectors like the fishing industry, which relies on refrigeration to keep its catch fresh, said Maarten Akkerman of GreenID, a Hanoi-based NGO focusing on sustainable energy.

"Loss of electricity ... forced seafood producers or fishermen to take their seafood elsewhere. They had to rent cars or storage space in other cities, which is costly,” said Akkerman, who conducted his research in Vietnam's coastal city of Quy Nhon.

Storms and flooding could saturate wood, leaving it useless for cooking, he said, recommending alternatives such as industry waste being used for biogas cooking systems, as well as small-scale solar and wind power systems along coasts, or small hydropower systems in mountain streams.

"Vietnam has very centralized power – coal, gas and hydropower," Akkerman said.

"Decentralized energy could help with energy access during natural disasters," he added, noting that community level energy solutions would be more resilient in the face of climate change.

Several of the researchers – part of the Asian Cities Climate Change Resilience Network – had just started studies looking at ways to strengthen clean water supplies and sanitation in flood-prone areas.

They said community involvement in the planning and management of any solutions was key to ensuring the projects were sustainable.

In Bangladesh, for example, Habitat for Humanity worked closely with a slum community in the capital Dhaka that suffered frequent floods to solve their drainage and waste problems.

"The drains were plugged with plastic, paper, everything people threw on the ground," said John A. Armstrong, the director of Habitat for Humanity in Bangladesh.

About a year ago, the NGO helped form a community water and sanitation committee that designed a waste management system that they could manage. They collected money from families, picked up garbage, and then cleaned and covered up the drains.

"This last season, they didn't have any flooding. It wasn't a problem," Armstrong said.

(Reporting by Alisa Tang, Editing by Ros Russell)

source: http://www.reuters.com

Nicaragua Strengthens Disaster Preparedness

Managua, Feb 6 (Prensa Latina) Strengthening disaster preparedness remains today on the agenda of the Nicaraguan authorities, which will soon conduct evacuation practices in schools. According to the coordinator of the Communication and Citizenship Council, Rosario Murillo, such exercises will take place from next February 16 to 21.

Practices will begin on Monday of that week in the northern departments of Estelí, Madriz, Nueva Segovia, Jinotega and Matagalpa.

Schools of León, Chinandega and Managua will do it on Tuesday, and Masaya, Granada, Carazo and Rivas on Wednesday.

The rest of the week, correspond to departments as Boaco, Chontales, Rio San Juan, and the autonomous regions of North and South Atlantic.

According to the advisor to the President for Educational Affairs, Salvador Vanegas, drills will last about 11 minutes, while the training given to teachers will take several hours.

Recently Murillo said that such exercises should be repeated in the third week of each month, with the objective of maintaining teachers and students prepared for natural disasters.

'This helps us to evacuate quickly, to face any eventuality,' she said, recalling that Nicaragua is a country of high seismic risk.

The Central American nation is located in the so-called Pacific Ring of Fire, an area of more than 40,000 kilometers that concentrates most active volcanoes in the world and where telluric events happen more frequently and magnitude.

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