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The territory Population 795 937 inhab Surface 2 118 km 2 Counties 29 Cities & villages 82 To study territor ial resilien ce Arrondissement de Nantes

The territory

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The territory. To study territorial resilience. Arrondissement de Nantes. The project. Find a «resilience index» for a territory face to major natural and industrial hazards in the future : other risks and threats... A qualitative «index» - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The territory

The territory

Population 795 937 inhab

Surface 2 118 km2

Counties 29

Cities & villages

82

To study territorial resilience Arrondissement

de Nantes

Page 2: The territory

The project

Find a «resilience index» for a territory face to major natural and industrial hazards

in the future : other risks and threats... A qualitative «index» Mixing prevention, planning, preparedness,

risk education, emergency management, economical and social resilience and recovery

Based on «global view» on a territory Objectives : optimize a costly system of

“reparation”2

Page 3: The territory

Feb 2010 Xynthia Storm : 53 DeathsBad prevention “implementation”

Good emergency responsePoor resilience response

Population unhappyLaw suits ….. – big losses

Page 4: The territory

Stakes

Consciousness

Fre

qu

en

cy

An

ticip

atio

nIn

tens

ity

Prep

ared

nes

s

Governance

Vulnerability

How to implement

Societal Resilience ?

Page 5: The territory

Searching for an Index :How do weproceed ?

Defining a « gravity » mark for the territoryincluding :

-natural and technologicalhazards (occurency&intensity)

-stakesatrisk (importance &vulnerability)

Page 6: The territory

Searching for an Index :How do weproceed ?

Defining an “ability to react” mark for the territory :

Studying all kind of prevention process – emergency planning & preparedness - education –assurance – communication – relationship between stake-holders…

ANTICIPATION (Risk prevention & education) REACTIVITY (Response of all kinds)

DDRM – Major hazard document on the Dept. PCS – Emergency plan for cities

DICRIM – Risk education document for population (city & school)

POI - PPI – Emergency plan – industrial hazards

PPRN (prevention plan for major natural risk) PPMS - School emergency plans

PPRT (prevention plan for major industrial risk) White (Hospital) plan

SDACR (Planning organization for fire and rescue responders)

ORSEC response framework

Page 7: The territory

Searching for an Index :How do weproceed ?

Resilience index : “Ability to react” mark

“Gravity” mark

If > 1 Resilience positive If < 1 territory still at risk.

But an index >1 does not mean all the work is done !

Page 8: The territory

Beyond the Index :Increasing territorial resilience

Beside rating the resilience, wealso focus on highlightingthe ways to reinforceresiliencewith the best economicefficiency.

So the territorial resilience index must be a qualitative index !

Page 9: The territory

1

2

3

4

0

STAKES

1

2

3

4

People

Economy

Environment

Heritage

5

5

1234

1 2 3 4

5

5

VULNERABILITY

FREQUENCY

INTENSITY

Number of disasters that

occured

Level expected

Level reached

Perception of one-self exposition

Known by studies

GRAVITY

The gravity mark

Page 10: The territory

1

2

3

4

0

1

2

3

4

5

1234

1 2 3 4

5

5

ANTICIPATION

PREPAREDNESS

5

CONSCIOUSNESS

GOVERNANCE

Prevention planning

Vigilance

Warning

Risk education

Risk information

Intervention planning

Exercises

Training / Formation

Politician commitment

Budgets

Inter-actor relationship

Skills

Financial cover

Social cohesion

ABILITY TO REACT

The ability to react mark

Page 11: The territory

1

2

3

4

0

1

2

3

4

5

5

1234

1 2 3 4

5

5

GRAVITY1

2

3

4

0

1

2

3

4

5

1234

1 2 3 4

5

5

5

ABILITY TO REACT

Reactivity = 24

Gravity = 16Resilience Index would

be 1.5

Beyond the Index :

Page 12: The territory

1

2

3

4

0

STAKES

1

2

3

4

5

5

1234

1 2 3 4

5

5

VULNERABILITY

FREQUENCY

INTENSITYGRAVITY1

2

3

4

0

1

2

3

4

5

1234

1 2 3 4

5

5

ANTICIPATION

PREPAREDNESS

5

CONSCIOUSNESS

GOVERNANCE

ABILITY TO REACT

over reactive

Under reactive

Less and more We need to be less vulnerableand more reactive

Beyond the Index :

Page 13: The territory

How do wecollect data : The inquiries

Interview with the persons in charge of major natural and technologicalhazards in :

Of course, besideourownresearch.

cities The Regional Environnement Administration (DREAL)

the Prefecture and itsspecialized services

The RegionalHealth Administration (ARS)

the FireDepartment (SDIS 44) the local Education Administration (Académie de

Nantes)

the industrial complexes

Page 14: The territory

First study (2010-2011) :The area

Page 15: The territory

First study (2010-2011) :The results

Unequal level of prepardnessbetweenstakeholders. Low for cities, higher for local administration

Low level of communication on natural and technologicalhazardsmatters

Weakgovernance. Not enough intercourse betweenactors. Low budgets dedicated.

Page 16: The territory

Second study (2011) :The area

Page 17: The territory

Second study (2011) :Course of action

Upgrading the methodology.

Collecting information by questionnaire and inquiries

Information processing (november-december 2011)

Final report redaction (december 2011)

Study is on going !

Page 18: The territory

• Second Study Delivery : January 2012

• Second approach to see « validity » of the concept facing field reality

• Supported by the Ministry of Ecology and Sustainable Development

Page 19: The territory

Jacques FAYEresponsable du bureau de l’information préventive, de la coordination et de la prospective

Service des risques naturels et hydrauliquesDirection générale de la prévention des risquesMinistère de l’écologie, de l’énergie, du développement durable et de la mer

With the support

Thankyou for your attention

Léo Muller

Page 20: The territory

Reduce Gravity

1. Risk and vulnerability assessment2. Taking care of risks in economic development3. Insurances policy4. Prevention & Preparedness5. Risk education

10 key points to achieve Resilience

Reinforcing Response

6. Warning People may be affected7. Safety of people and goods8. Business continuity9. Manage Emergency/Crisis Management (and post)10. Planning economic resilience

Page 21: The territory

•Risque, aléas (p+i) , Enjeux (I+V)

•Risque mesuré (=qualifié) de 0 à 100 soit (5+5)*(5+5)

•Le risque est classifié (selon une échelle de 1 à 6) qui donne des appréciations sur la gravité

•La gravité se mesure par le produit (p+i)*(I+V)

•Pour réduire la gravité : renforcer la réactivité

•Réactivité = « anticipation » (= vigilance et préparation) & « culture du risque » (= conscience et confiance)

•On a donc réactivité = (v+p) * (c+c), à savoir 5+5 * 5+5

•On a donc 2 indicateurs : GRAVITE et REACTIVITE, données chiffrables.

•Indice de résilience : REACTIVITE/ GRAVITE

•Si indice > 1 alors résilience positive pour le territoire

•Si indice < 1 risque pour le territoire

•Rôle de « ERIS » ?