41
MAP OF CHINA’S PROVINCES

Catastrophic Earthquakes in China PART I

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

LESSONS LEARNED FROM PAST NOTABLE DISASTERS: LANDSLIDES. Large volume landslides occur in association with an earthquake’s ground shaking or a typhoon’s rainfall. Presentation courtesy of Dr. Walter Hays, Global Alliance for Disaster Reduction

Citation preview

Page 1: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

MAP OF CHINA’S PROVINCES

Page 2: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

LESSONS LEARNED FROM PAST NOTABLE DISASTERS

PART III D: CHINALANDSLIDES

Page 3: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

NATURAL HAZARDS THAT PLACE CHINA’S NATURAL HAZARDS THAT PLACE CHINA’S COMMUNITIES AT RISK COMMUNITIES AT RISK

NATURAL HAZARDS THAT PLACE CHINA’S NATURAL HAZARDS THAT PLACE CHINA’S COMMUNITIES AT RISK COMMUNITIES AT RISK

FLOODS

TYPHOONS

EARTHQUAKES

LANDSLIDESS

DROUGHT EPISODES

GLOBAL CLIMATE CHANGE

ENACT AND IMPLEMENT POLICIES HAVING HIGH BENEFIT/COST FOR COMMUNITY RESILIENCE

ENACT AND IMPLEMENT POLICIES HAVING HIGH BENEFIT/COST FOR COMMUNITY RESILIENCE

GOAL: DISASTER GOAL: DISASTER RESILIENCERESILIENCE

GOAL: DISASTER GOAL: DISASTER RESILIENCERESILIENCE

Page 4: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

CHINA’SCHINA’S

COMMUNITIESCOMMUNITIES

CHINA’SCHINA’S

COMMUNITIESCOMMUNITIESDATA BASES DATA BASES AND INFORMATIONAND INFORMATIONDATA BASES DATA BASES AND INFORMATIONAND INFORMATION

HAZARDS: GROUND SHAKING GROUND FAILURE SURFACE FAULTING TECTONIC DEFORMATION TSUNAMI RUN UP AFTERSHOCKS

• LANDSLIDE HAZARDS

• BLDG. INVENTORY• VULNERABILITY• LOCATION

LANDSLIDE RISK LANDSLIDE RISK

RISK

ACCEPTABLE RISK

UNACCEPTABLE RISK

GOAL: LANDSLIDE GOAL: LANDSLIDE DISASTER RESILIENCEDISASTER RESILIENCE

• PREPAREDNESS• PROTECTION• EARLY WARNING• EMERGENCY RESPONSE• RECOVERY and RECONSTRUCTION

POLICY OPTIONSPOLICY OPTIONS

Page 5: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

POLICY POLICY ADOPTIONADOPTION

POLICY POLICY ADOPTIONADOPTION

RISK ASSESSMENT

• VULNERABILITYVULNERABILITY

• EXPOSUREEXPOSURE

• EVENTEVENT

POLICY ASSESSMENT

• COSTCOST

• BENEFITBENEFIT

•CONSEQUENCESCONSEQUENCES

TOWARDS LANDSLIDE DISASTER TOWARDS LANDSLIDE DISASTER RESILIENCERESILIENCE

LAND-SLIDESLAND-SLIDESLAND-SLIDESLAND-SLIDES EXPECTED EXPECTED LOSSLOSS

EXPECTED EXPECTED LOSSLOSS

Page 6: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

MAP OF CHINA’S PROVINCES

Page 7: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

LANDSLIDES

LARGE VOLUME LANDSLIDES OCCUR IN ASSOCIATION WITH AN EARTHQUAKE’S

GROUND SHAKING OR A TYPHOON’S RAINFALL

Page 8: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

M8.0 BEICHUAN EARTHQUAKE GENERATED LARGE VOLUME

LANDLIDES

2:30 PM LOCAL TIME

MAY 12, 2008

Page 9: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

BEICHUAN, CHINA EARTHQUAKE: MAY 12, 2008

Page 10: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

PHYSICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF THE EARTHQUAKE

• Epicenter was located 100 km (60 miles) from Chengdu, the provincial capital, which is on edge of the Tibetan foothills and home to about 10 million people.

• This earthquake occurred on a well known fault zone, which has generated destructive earthquakes in the past (e.g., on 25 August 1933).

Page 11: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

CHANGDU, 100 KM FROM EPICENTER

Page 12: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

COMPARISON WITH 1976 TANGSHAN EARTHQUAKE

• The Beichuan earthquake was more than 2 x larger than the July 28,1976 Tangshan earthquake, which caused 255,000+ deaths.

Page 13: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

EMERGENCY RESOURCES

• More than 20,000 military personnel were ordered immediately to assist in high-damage areas.

• The number was increased substantially to deal with the “earthquake lakes.”

Page 14: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

SOCIETAL IMPACTS OF THE LANDSLIDES

• Some roads were impassable because of landslides, which hindered search and rescue,---

• but, worst of all, 69 unique “earthquake lakes” were created by the landslides in mountainous regions.

Page 15: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

SITING AND BUILDING ON UNSTABLE SLOPES

LANDSLIDESLANDSLIDES

SOIL AND ROCK SUCEPTIBLE TO FALLS

SOIL AND ROCK SUCEPTIBLE TO TOPPLES

SOIL AND ROCK SUCEPTIBLE TO SPREADS

SOIL AND ROCK SUSCEPTIBLE TO FLOWS

PRECIPITATION THAT TRIGGERS SLOPE FAILURE SHAKING

GROUND SHAKING THAT TRIGGERS SLOPE FAILURE

CAUSES OF DAMAGE

CAUSES OF DAMAGE

CASE HISTORIESCASE HISTORIES

Page 16: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

LANDSLIDE: JINGXIU

Page 17: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

LANDSLIDE: HANWANG

Page 18: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

LANDSLIDE: MIANZHU

Page 19: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

69 EARTHQUAKE LAKES

Created by the quake-induced landslides

Page 20: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

ONE OF 69 "QUAKE LAKES": BEI HE RIVER DAMMED BY LANDSLIDE DEBRIS

Page 21: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

DAYS 14-17: CHINA EARTHQUAKE SURVIVORS

NOW HAVING TO COPE WITH THREAT OF FLOODS FROM

69 EARTHQUAKE LAKES

Page 22: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

DAYS 14-17: GOVERNMENT MAKES RISK REDUCTION ON 69 "QUAKE

LAKES" A TOP PRIORITY

•Sixty-nine “Quake Lakes” created in mountainous areas by the debris from landslides appeared ready to burst their banks, and continuing rainfall was exacerbating the threat.

Page 23: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

$29 million in emergency funds and increased military

resources were allocated for the priority effort.

Page 24: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

DAYS 14-17: GOVERNMENT PLANS EVACUATIONS TO REDUCE RISK IF A "QUAKE LAKE" SHOULD BURST

•Authorities announced plans to evacuate more than a million people in anticipation of failure of the rock-and-mud embankments.

Page 25: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

EVACUATION CHALLENGE

•Evacuation would have to be accomplished within one to four hours, the time for the wall of water to reach and inundate scores of cities and rural villages

that were already devastated.

Page 26: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

BEICHUAN: 3.3 KM (2 MI) DOWN-STREAM FROM A "QUAKE LAKE"

Page 27: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

LESSONS LEARNED FOR DISASTER RESILIENCE

• ALL NATURAL HAZARDS

• CAPACITY FOR INTELLIGENT EMERGENCY RESPONSE IS ESSENTIAL FOR COMMUNITY RESILIENCE.

Page 28: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

FLEEING POSSIBLE FLOODING

Page 29: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

EVACUATIONS TO ESCAPE FLOODING THREAT

Page 30: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

EVACUATING

Page 31: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

EVERYONE GOES

Page 32: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

THIRTY GIANT EARTHMOVERS FLOWN IN TO QUAKE LAKES

Page 33: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

SOLDIERS DISPATCHED TO CREATE DIVERSION CHANNELS

Page 34: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

GOAL: A DIVERSION CHANNEL IN FIVE DAYS OR LESS

Page 35: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

EVERY HOUR IS IMPORTANT

Page 36: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

TANGJIASHAN, LARGEST OF 69 "QUAKE LAKES"

Page 37: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

RISING WATER IN TANGJIASHAN CAUSES EVACUATION OF YULI, MAY 31

Page 38: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I
Page 39: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

NO DAMAGE TO THREE GORGES DAM:1,000 KM AWAY

Page 40: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

SOLDIERS REPAIR CRACKS IN ZIPINGPU DAM:DUJIANGYAN

Page 41: Catastrophic Earthquakes in China   PART I

LESSONS LEARNED FOR DISASTER RESILIENCE

• ALL NATURAL HAZARDS

• CAPACITY FOR RECOVERY AND RECONSTRUCTION IS ESSENTIAL FOR COMMUNITY RESILIENCE.