Forecasting With Confidence VI- Beyond Policy Heeding the Message of Yolanda

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    Forecasting with Confidence

    Part VI

    Beyond PolicyHeeding the Message of Yolanda

    If we look at the worlds major disaster record: Hurricane Katrina, Haiyan (Yolanda),Japan tsunami, tropical storm Ondoy, the Ormoc Flash Floods, Haiti Quake, among

    many others, most of those that were killed, died swiftly and suddenly.

    In almost all of these cataclysms there is barely little or no time to issue forewarning to

    the public, if at all. With all the technology abundant in our midst, the oft-repeated

    excuse is that, the disaster happened so suddenly hitting at the population without

    warning. And as we cited in earlier discussions, it was chic to keep repeating with media

    the ersatz refrain that: This was by far the strongest disaster to hit Fukushima /

    Tacloban City, etc. over the last one hundred years. A convenient though nonsensicalstatement.

    If we look at disaster alerts or warnings to the public, it is clearly mystifying that it

    often took several hours for the Philippine Atmospheric, Geospheric, Astronomical

    Services Administration (PAGASA) to declare particular communities need to evacuate.

    PAGASA will tell us that to advise and eventually enforce evacuation is a difficult

    decision to make, as it will require so much on the part of the evacuees and those that

    will take them to supposedly safer places. Yet there is also much to consider before

    weather and climate risks show up.

    PHIVOLCS's case shows it to be more pro-active. It is able to give alerts that allows formuch earlier evacuation than PAGASA.

    Following constructive suggestions the National Disaster Risk Reduction Management

    Council (NDRRMC) and its counterparts in other areas, is increasingly becoming more

    pro-active in the area of hydro meteorologic events.

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    Aside from undertaking early evacuation during impending volcanic event (e.g. possible

    Mayon Volcano eruption in Albay), NDRRMC and private sector partners are now more

    active in doing advance evacuation prior to foreseen flooding.

    The system is not yet as thorough and is being learned trial and error. In time, it will be

    mastered and by the time the mechanisms are perfected, more funds may be madeavailable by more compassionate administrations in the future.

    PAGASA RAINFALL & FLOOD WARNING SYSTEM

    RED

    WARNING

    Intermittent rain in 1

    hour and succeeding 2

    hours

    EVACUATE

    ORANGE

    WARNING

    Heavy rainfall in 1 hour

    and succeeding 2 hoursBE ALERT

    YELLOW

    WARNING

    Strong rain in 1 hour and

    succeeding 2 hoursMONITOR

    PAGASA public advisory alert matrix.

    From the time when the late Pres. Ferdinand Marcos left, the succeeding regimes did

    nothing to radically and comprehensively improve the existing system for safeguarding

    populations from disaster. Much less was given to preventive or disaster risk mitigation

    measures.i

    The leaders of four regimes, including the incumbent one, coldly responded to issues

    raised about risk mitigation.

    Two administrations the previous one and the present continuously refused to

    recognize the need for holding a broad based summit on disaster forecasting in the

    Philippines from 2010 to this year.

    On their own, the two administrations are holding piecemeal meetings about disaster

    forecasting and conducting small-budgeted geohazard mapping and environment

    management projects but never being able to get into the core of the real risk mapping

    and establishing the living and breathing, functional system to track disasters while they

    are in formation mode and during the time when they grow to be actual storms or

    whatever form and shape the catastrophe will take.

    The environment risk map takes more than just having a simple map or even a pseudo

    interactive digital image on the computer.

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    As a case in point, most certainly, everyone will consider it foolish for the people in

    Bourbon Street, New Orleans, Louisiana to vacate their residence and businesses

    despite what happened in Katrina. It will take the end of the world to make that

    happen.

    In Venice, they built fortified extensions of the city of canals and the gondolas. No onecan make the people of Venice live in another place instead. Again, it will take

    Armageddon for that to occur.

    Surviving In Pain

    A year after adjusting with extreme difficulty in receiving a second contract on Earth all

    of a sudden, Yolanda survivors have had to come to grips with the recent year and

    what still lies ahead. The future looks both bright and dim for many survivors.

    Those affected by the disasters impact by remote, having beenmore than 100 kilometers from ground zero of the tragedy, are

    not excluded from the suffering multitudes that confronted

    Yolanda face to face.

    In many ways, the aftermath of the disaster had been and will even be more painful for

    a lot of them.

    They cannot avail of any kind of relief from anyone being far from the site of the tragic

    event despite that anyone of them that distant escaped being killed by the gruesome

    storm surge spanning a whole length of several towns and ending up in Tacloban City.

    Some of these victims-by-remote ofYolanda do not have any living parents. Some

    have siblings that were killed or else fortunately survived.

    In one particular case, the siblings living in Tacloban were just one day short of being

    killed having left Tacloban more than twenty hours before the powerful storm surge

    struck.

    The distance of these remote affected Taclobanons did nothing to exempt cousins,uncles, aunts, granduncles and friends, classmates, childhood sweethearts, in laws,

    neighbors and many other people known to them either briefly or all their lives.

    More pitiful is the plight of those in the disaster affected zone. Shelter, housing, despite

    the help of many private organizations, will still take some more years before full

    restoration.

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    Owners of private enterprise will take years to recover past productivity and

    profitability. Children will grow up with the trauma of Yolanda. Social loss, can never be

    replaced and repaired. The end of the suffering, excruciating for some, will never be in

    sight for everyone.

    Disaster and Modernization

    It cannot be said that just because we are no longer in Medieval times or earlier that

    we are more fortunate than our predecessors back in the day.

    Hardly was there any kind of preparedness nor semblance of order among the populace

    and their ruling masters in the past. Yielding helplessly to a severe state of confusion

    and disorientation compounded the suffering of survivors following each disaster.

    There was no humanitarian mission to bring disaster relief goods, provide emergency

    health and medical assistance, temporary shelter in the form of tents, blankets and

    other items.

    On each occasion, either fear and panic or mass conflagration ensues or both. A special

    phrase was coined specifically for such extraordinary events in the old times: plague.

    Eventually, society invented the term fortuitous circumstance.Both ostensibly

    encompassed any and all unexpected events that are absolutely beyond human control.

    Disasters are still beyond anyones control, but now these are detected very much in

    advance of their arrival. Populations can be exhorted and moved to prepare for

    eventualities.

    Today we live in times where the conditions are no longer the same to those in the past

    when disasters were difficult to forecast using simple human ability. But the seers of old

    and simple farmers, trackers and fishermen who read the stars and the skies, may still

    beat our weathermen today for giving more accurate report and warning to their

    people.

    Even with no existing evidence of an arriving calamity, intelligent machines can

    extrapolate the manner in which natural or even human-made catastrophe can

    happen. Modeling software and technologies can predict the extent of damage and

    potential number of casualties, fatalities.

    The reliable forecasters of old had to read unusual flights of animals, birds, insects

    among many other manifest signs to know there was disaster. Only shamans and

    witches smelled or sensed disasters without actually needing visual symbols.

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    In modern age, with positive effort it is not impossible to create models for sensing in

    advance cyclones, hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes that have not even started to

    form.

    Policy and Disavowal

    Science, politics and finance can never be taken separately and independently. In spiteof the noblest of statements from any of these quarters to the contrary, all three

    sectors are intertwined.

    In this sense, as made manifest by many disasters not being wholly tracked before they

    wreak total havoc upon populations, policy becomes a dimwitted and ridiculous thing.

    Entire policy regimes are not only brainless they are also sinister.

    All the technologies and systems for detection are already present and running. It takes

    just a flick of a finger to pinpoint any kind of anomaly and communicate the vital and

    necessary information to the concerned parties.

    Yet the wielders of wealth take the peoples money but never give back to the masses.

    Anything that filters back to the poor through the AidNGOs of the rich often has strings

    attached to them.ii

    On the part of politicians, they rake in as much skim from the national coffers as they

    can and shove it into the banks of the wielders of wealth, joining the ranks of the

    world's Forbes Listed and the underworld lords, beneficiaries of Alvin Toffler's

    phenomenon of rapid wealth creation by engaging in criminal enterprise.

    In reference to Haiyan - Yolanda, PAGASA received numerous alerts from all over the

    world about the oncoming cataclysm, but since geospatial information and intelligence

    is not free and cheap, as much as it can, the alerts could only amount to so much

    volume of data as could be allowed.

    In the geohazard community of practice, the Philippines, Burma, like many other poor

    countries, are not even given a decent status. Philippine representatives were not

    graciously extended invitation during the last conference of this group.

    This may change in the near future (or at the very least, we hope it will) with the

    recognition by the geohazard community of practice of the extreme vulnerability of

    even such a small nation as the Philippines. Including the fact that you cannot fight

    world sympathy.

    How that would help the country however during another time of major disaster similar

    to Haiyan - Yolanda, only time can tell.

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    Even Japan that is a source of financial support for the members of this specialized

    scientific community and therefore very eligible to receive and pay for vital geospatial

    data, was not spared by the suddenness of the tsunami that wrought too much

    destruction that was unheard of in this century.

    Moreover, Japan has its own satellites. That makes the end result of the quake-tsunamidoubly bedeviling. The cheap consolation was that the Prime Minister resigned. In the

    Philippines, his counterpart blamed everyone, but most of all the entire setup. The

    systems failed. What can I do? this politician said and that was that.

    Denying Policy, Denial of Anti-Survival

    The task of making a population safe is preceded by the act of determining the kind of

    natural or human-made threat that may, at one time in a foreseeable future hit the

    population.

    We have consistently ruled that requisite out. For no comprehensible raison d'tre at all,

    the conventional wisdom will proudly maintain a pervasive lack of an inclination to

    perform that act.

    On the other hand, it becomes easy to blame the masses that there is resistance to

    enforced evacuation and to heap the accusation that the masses could actually be the

    real major cause of global warming.

    In addition, because of the poors ignorance in conserving the environment that onlythe black guelphs and the royals are most conversant and have a monopoly of

    advocacy about, they must clearly be the principal suspect.

    Such deliberate or unwitting refusal to undertake honest-to-goodness disaster

    forecasting and mitigation forces many leaders to heap blame on the silent majority.

    This springs from a posture of disavowal by moneyed nations towards poor nations that

    they perpetuate as retrogressive agricultural enclaves or more primitive ones as much

    as they can.

    As long as the Philippines or any other wretched country cannot produce a decent

    screw, screwdriver or any other similar item, it is better for the manipulating and

    controlling more powerful state.

    Any pronouncement as to giving any form of support for Philippine modernization is

    simply, as the American Indians say, just pure bull manure.

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    Internally this perpetuation of backwardness by the wielder of power and wealth is

    present in a national capital's refusal of true development aid for the countrysides.

    Such cruel mindset is reflected succinctly in the ignoble posturing of the regime of Mr.

    Aquino in denying even the tiniest of aid for Tacloban long after the disaster has turned

    the poor victims in the area literally into replicas of zombies, disoriented, roaming the

    streets in abject hunger and utter perplexity and looting stores to temporally satisfytheir craving for food or in some cases, personal items and utensils for survival.

    Why give the poor and the rural, backward populations the right to keep themselves

    alive? In the next few years, as the United Nations keeps carping about, the world will

    have a population size that is no longer supportable by the amount of food that is

    produced in the planet.

    Perhaps the survivalists and enemies of banksters are right. There is wisdom in fighting

    the minority promoting the brutal worldview of decimation.

    Every small energy should therefore be devoted by the sane populations around the

    world to bolster the fight for human survival and to eliminate the power of the

    purveyors of decimation.

    Mitigation

    What could have prevented the deaths from Ketsana - Ondoyof people sleeping in

    their homes or those that were trapped when the management of SM Shoemart Mall

    ordered a lockdown for fear of lootings when the Marikina River started rising? A bignumber of innocent shoppers and staff died like trapped mice inside that mall.

    Many others, particularly those living at the banks of east Metro Manila floodways were

    washed away and killed by the raging runoff waters. Similar death befell the victims of

    the floods in Cagayan de Oro City and Iligan City when Typhoon Sendongstruck in

    2011.

    Unlike ebola that strikes one household after another until as British Broadcasting (BBC)

    says, one whole village has died, Katrina,Yolanda, the killer earthquake-tsunami

    that hit Japanand theOrmoc Flash Floods, only struck once.

    The devastations in the case of these major disasters, are too hideous and defy

    imagination. The havoc and desolation far outweigh that of many documented massive

    disease outbreaks.

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    In Tacloban, for example, whole or mangled corpses littered the streets, cadavers

    caught up in high angles, dead remains partly or fully buried in mud or debris or under

    several huge marine vessels, houses and infrastructures turned to rubble.

    These are among many images of horrendous events that transpired on the onslaught

    of Haiyan.

    Yolanda Photos courtesy ofBBC,FB News FlashandInterAksyonJapan Photos courtesy ofUSA Today,The GuardianandNemelschek SCIA

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/http://www.bbc.co.uk/http://www.bbc.co.uk/http://fbnwsflash.blogspot.com/http://fbnwsflash.blogspot.com/http://fbnwsflash.blogspot.com/http://www.interaksyon.com/http://www.interaksyon.com/http://www.interaksyon.com/http://www.usatoday.com/http://www.usatoday.com/http://www.usatoday.com/http://www.theguardian.com/http://www.theguardian.com/http://www.theguardian.com/http://blog.nemelschek-scia.com/http://blog.nemelschek-scia.com/http://blog.nemelschek-scia.com/http://blog.nemelschek-scia.com/http://www.theguardian.com/http://www.usatoday.com/http://www.interaksyon.com/http://fbnwsflash.blogspot.com/http://www.bbc.co.uk/
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    The first encounter as you paid the scene a visit even several weeks and months

    passed long after the tragedy is the smell of death.

    A stench too overpowering and numbing that almost divests the place of any humanity

    and life.

    Yolanda Photo collage from the world wide web

    One of the considerations that disaster agencies should seriously factor into their

    forecast and public alert system is the projected size, breadth, extent of a disaster.iii

    When quantified through seismic readings and other instrument as well as human

    obtained geologic information, volcanologists like those in PHIVOLCS can calculate the

    degree of damage and potential casualties in the eruption of Mt. Mayon.

    Other data such as in the case of PAGASA can provide different projections.

    With Haiyan Yolanda, it would have been possible to forecast in a more credible

    way, how the storm surge might arrive and how it will affect people.iv

    In hindsight, if the storm size of Haiyan Yolandawere taken more seriously into

    consideration and its impact upon the targeted zones, it would have been possible to

    make the public alert more understandable, comprehensible.v

    When you exhort populations to leave their habitat and they understand the stakes well

    enough, even if the evacuation will be forced, at least there would be more lives saved

    than lost and you get better cooperation. You need therefore to get your facts straight,

    your briefing as satisfactory to the receiver as possible.

    The fact that the PAGASA just defensively kept stating that they shouted Storm surge

    coming! Storm surge coming! five days, no! six days, no! seven days! before

    November 8, 2013, was not only inadequate and incompetent.

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    It was laughable, silly, stupid and contemptible. In sum however, it is to no fault of

    PAGASA on their own. It was just a function of policy and bad habit.

    What the Philippines, a truly poor and neglected member of the brotherhood of nations

    and led by an incompetent leadership, can do is for its experts and scientists to improve

    on the disaster forecasting and mitigation on their own.

    In particular, for flood alerts, the PAGASA should now be able to build a more thorough

    matrix of variables that will not only factor color code of the rainfall and flood alert, a

    tiny picture of light, heavy, massive rainfall and small description of appropriate action

    to take for the public with the terms monitor, alerto, lumikas filling up a last column in

    the existing matrix.

    PAGASA can now create more fields or columns and make the recommended action to

    take more pro-active. PAGASA can also make its technology, info-data coordination with

    other weather agencies more aggressive.

    One of the more sensible changes that PAGASA should consider, in coordination with

    the NDRRMC, is pinpointing the exact date and time of advanced evacuation for those

    that might drown or get killed during heavy flooding. PAGASA and the MMDA, the

    NDRRMC know how to calculate percentages of vulnerable residences and zones that

    floods will be able to infiltrate and damage.

    This is true not only for the enclaves of the poor but for all types of enclaves as flood

    does not distinguish between economic status. You cannot evacuate people when it is

    too late, therefore it is useless to move people when the floods are already there asin the case of Ketsana (Ondoy). Therefore now PAGASA and NDRRMC, as well as all

    other concerned agencies have to do their utmost to be more pro-active in this regard.

    The number of residences and establishments in targeted zones that will be hit is

    important and the extent of the rise of the surface and subsea level runoff water.

    These communities must be the priority areas that must be evacuated. Public warning

    systems must be installed and should work in areas that are usually most vulnerable to

    make warning and evacuation less tedious and often, hopeless.

    With that done, PAGASA can now be able to obtain as much input as possible to fill up

    an improved matrix for each and every atmospheric, geospheric and meteorological

    event that is its own name and function states.

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    Revising the public alert: New fields, columns to be added by PAGASA into its current public alert digital poster.

    PAGASA RAINFALL AND FLOOD WARNING SYSTEM (PUBLIC)

    WARNING

    COURSE OF

    ACTION

    INDICATORDESCRIPTION

    SIZE SPEED FORCE DURATION

    RED WARNINGENFORCED EVACUATION

    Intermittent rain in 1hour and succeeding

    2 hours

    ORANGE WARNING

    ADVANCE EVACUATION

    Heavy rainfall in 1

    hour and succeeding

    2 hours

    YELLOW WARNING

    PREPARE SHELTER, RELIEF

    SUPPLIES

    Strong rain in 1 hour

    and succeeding 2

    hours

    WARNING OF

    RAIN/FLOOD/ETC.

    Shower thunderclap

    and gales

    REPORT OF NEW DETECTED

    CLIMATE WEATHER RISK

    Detection and

    Monitoring of

    climate-weather

    disturbance

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    To be true to its adopted slogan, "Tracking the Sky. . . Helping the Country." PAGASA,

    and along with it, the PHIVOLCS, et al as one unified advocacy body should do its

    utmost best to insinuate itself more forcefully into the geohazard community of

    practice.

    The cluster will increase its collaboration with all the members of the community

    including Asian neighbor countries that have good relations with the earth observationsatellite group like Malaysia, Singapore, India among others.vi

    After what happened in Bohol (#Boholindol) and in Tacloban (#Yolanda) ThePhilippines can no longer afford to keep being ignored in international bodies.

    All kinds of funds are spent left and right for useless purposes and self-aggrandizement,

    funding these coordinations will merely be a small drop in the bucket. The money

    should never be denied, it should have been made available even before yesterday.

    Furthermore, the Aquino regime should stop holding on to the salaries and benefits of

    disaster agency workers. What they have been stealing is already way too much,

    denying our disaster agency employees and experts is inhuman and allowing the deaths

    of multitudes in future disasters.

    Only those more than crazy to commit indirect genocide can afford to do this and they

    surely must not deserve to be in government and must be punished severely after this

    regime relinquishes power.

    It all takes a flitting moment after getting snagged in a hole on the ground to blame

    ones self or another person for the accident. It took weeks for the victims

    ofYolanda to find the blame on a national government that refused to give even a

    modicum of help. But all that is past now.

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    Tacloban Citys Mr. Alfred Romualdez and the Philippines Mr. Benigno Aquino should

    stop the blame game and work together. If not, one of them has or the both of them

    just have to go. Then and only then can the next sun shining be a brighter sun, a

    warmer sun.

    The story ofYolanda, for those who lived through it and were able to tell about it, is a

    story of hope.

    It is a tale about tomorrow, a reminder of what needs to be done, rather than the

    memory of what has gone. By all measure,Yolanda, is a challenge of death and dying

    - to the living to press on and find new pathways to safety, security, survival,

    compassion, responsiveness and most of all positive action.

    If it were all up to the scientists and those that mastered technological software and

    hardware alone, and they are not that stupid and foolish to perpetually engage in

    cerebral duels, endless intellectual masturbation and all other obtuse and ludicrous actsthat compel them not to band and work together or stay in the right direction, it is

    possible to say that the world would be a better place.

    At some point in time, many more populations around the globe will hit City Hall, tell it

    to the face of the omniscient demigods who mouth and enforce policy that they are

    nothing but a big load of shit and to shove their morass of bad policy up theirs.

    That will the occasion for the odds for survival to get better for the world's populations.

    If that happens, the souls of those that died in many world disasters likeYolanda and

    useless political conflicts maneuvered into happening by sinister forces will surely feelhappier wherever they are on that day.

    END NOTES

    iThe regime under Madam Corazon Cojuangco Aquino in 1986-87 became the instant beneficiary

    of no less than Japanese Yen Eight Billion (8-B) from JICA intended for flood control projects

    under the MMDA-DPWH. All the feasibility and technical studies to justify the funds were prepared

    under the previous administration and it took many years of project gestation before the money

    finally became available.

    For reasons that could not be explained, that fund, was lost. If those financial resources were used

    for the purposes for which they were intended, they could have done a lot of good to ease the

    problem of severe flooding in Metro Manila. Such amount might have saved hundreds of lives

    during Ketsana-Ondoy. Unlike those that followed after her, Madam Aquino was never jailed for

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    plunder. Madam Aquino went on to even further capture and hold hostage three other

    administrations including the incumbent one.

    ii For the miniscule few philanthropic groups that do outreach without an agenda, a warm salute to

    all of them is in order and it is fervently prayed that these groups extend their programs and

    projects towards relocation and resettling making human communities safer by helping them

    understand and move to safer grounds.

    One of these groups is a Taiwanese Foundation that up to this time has been active in

    reconstruction of devastated homes in Tacloban and other Yolanda-damaged towns.

    iii In earlier parts of this book, we have enjoined the following actions as part of the program to

    ensure safety and survival:

    1. Ensuring people safety (Detecting, forecasting)2. Making people know (Announcement)3. Making people understand (Brief Narrative, Explanation in Laymens terms)

    4. Providing the people a course of Action (Command)

    All these things require on the other hand, the following support factors:

    1. Forecasting Technical Capability2. Credibility3. Delivery Mechanism (Public Warning and Briefing System)4. Capacity Building (Training, Educating People)5. Quick Response Capability6. Evacuation to safe haven7. Relief, Rescue and Recovery8. Forensic and mortuary operations (in case of MCI)

    9. Rehabilitation, Reconstruction

    iv The size of a storm determines its costliness rather than strength, but far bigger storms trigger

    storm surge. Haiyan was a big sized storm hence the storm surge that struck Eastern Visayas and

    other areas.

    "Size of a storm

    "Observations indicate that size is only weakly correlated to variables such as storm intensity

    (i.e. maximum wind speed), radius of maximum wind, latitude, and maximum potential

    intensity.

    "Size plays an important role in modulating damage caused by a storm. All else equal, a larger

    storm will impact a larger area for a longer period of time. Additionally, a larger near-surface

    wind field can generate higher storm surge due to the combination of longer wind fetch, longer

    duration, and enhanced wave setup. For example, Hurricane Sandy, which struck the eastern

    U.S. in 2012, barely attained hurricane intensity prior to landfall yet was one of the costliest

    landfalling hurricanes in U.S. history because of its extremely large size. (From Wikipedia, the

    free encyclopedia)"

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    v Some of the past and recent disasters in the Philippines:*

    Baguio Killer Earthquake July 16, 1990, at 4:26 PM 1,621 killedMt Pinatubo Eruption June 15, 1991 847 killed

    Ormoc Flash Floods (Thelma/Uring) November 5, 1991+-5,080 killed. (the figure became much higherafter several months)

    Bohol-Cebu Earthquake October 15, 2013, at 8:12 a.m. 222 killed; 8 missing; 976 injured

    Tropical Cyclones

    TD Winnie (2004; 893 casualties) TY Frank (2008; 557 casualties)TY Reming (2006; 734 casualties) TS Pepeng (2009; 465 casualties)TS Ondoy (2009; 464 casualties) TY Reming (2000; 114 casualties), andTY Nanang (2001; 236 casualties) TY Basyang (2010; 102 casualties)TY Milenyo (2006; 213 casualties) TY Sendong (2011; 2,400 casualties)TY Feria (2001; 188 casualties) TY Yolanda (2013; +-10,000 casualties)

    First published inGlobal Geohazard Systems

    vi

    Government agencies must altogether stop the practice of elbowing one another as to who willbe Mr. and Ms. Climate Change, Mr. and Ms. Global Warming, or whatever label. No one agency

    must arrogate supremacy and monopoly for instance in hydro meteorologic concerns but

    cooperate with all the other agencies and accept that clustering, unifying policy advocacy,

    coordination and close interaction is the key to resolving all the issues besetting climate risk

    management.

    One unbelievably tiny Philippine agency in particular advertises itself to hold the franchise to all

    water related disasters and the ruling honcho in climate change particularly in matters pertaining

    to water. This is just pure humbug, incredibly stupid and should never ever be allowed in a sane

    society. It will not be a wonder why international bodies will shy away from inviting the Philippines

    to international conventions. All agencies whose functions are disaster related, directly or

    otherwise, must behave more decently and get their act together.

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