1 WMO: Climate and Water Department www.apfm.info WMO Training Workshop on Integrated Flood Management for countries in Western Asia and the Arab region Integrated Flood Management Integrated Flood Management As a Development Policy As a Development Policy 11-14 May 2009, Esteghlal Hotel, Tehran, Iran AVINASH TYAGI AVINASH TYAGI Director, Climate and Water Director, Climate and Water
WMO. Training Workshop on Integrated Flood Management for countries in Western Asia and the Arab region. 11-14 May 2009, Esteghlal Hotel, Tehran, Iran. Integrated Flood Management As a Development Policy. AVINASH TYAGI Director, Climate and Water. WMO: Climate and Water Department. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
1WMO: Climate and Water Department www.apfm.info
WMO
Training Workshop on Integrated Flood Managementfor countries in Western Asia and the Arab region
Integrated Flood Management Integrated Flood Management As a Development PolicyAs a Development Policy
11-14 May 2009, Esteghlal Hotel, Tehran, Iran
AVINASH TYAGIAVINASH TYAGIDirector, Climate and WaterDirector, Climate and Water
2
Sustainable Development
Development that "meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needs.”
In the flood management context mainly on the viability of floodplain use in the long term
3
Flood Management in the context of Integrated Water Resources Management, aiming at:
– Sustainable development: balancing development needs and flood risks
– Maximizing net benefits from floodplains: ensure livelihood security and poverty alleviation thereby addressing vulnerability
– Minimizing loss of life: in particular through end-to-end FF&W Systems and preparedness planning for extreme events
– Environmental preservation: ecosystem health & services
Integrated Flood Management (IFM) refers to the integration of land and water management in a river basin using a combination of measures that focus on coping with floods within a framework of IWRM and adopting risk management principles while recognizing that floods have beneficial impacts and can never be fully controlled.
5
Recognition that a river basin is a dynamic system with many interactions/fluxes between land and water bodies
Characteristics of IFM
6
Characteristics of IFM
Linkages between upstream changesand downstream effects and vice-versa
ww
w.astrosurf.com
Land use plans and water management to be combined in synthesized plan through co-ordination between land management and water management authorities
7
What is flood risk?
• Probability x Consequence• Hazard x Exposure x Vulnerability
• Example floods:– Hazard: probability of a particular discharge
or water level at a particular place– Exposure: Land and assets in the inundation
area of that flood– Vulnerability: ability/disability of the people or
assets to withstand, cope with or recover from the negative effects of that flood
8
Measures for Risk Reduction
Reduce hazard Reduce Exposure Reduce Vulnerability Retaining water where it falls
(increasing infiltration, rooftop storing)
Retention basins (natural wet lands or depressions, man made e.g., school play grounds, household underground tanks
Dams and reservoirs Diversion channel Land use management (e.g.,
house building codes in urban areas, infrastructure building practices, appropriate landscape planning)
Structural measures on the river (Dykes, river training work such as channelization, flood walls, raised infrastructures such as roads and railways)
Structural and non-structural measures/actions by individual (flood proofing)
Land regulation Flood emergency measures (flood
warning and evacuation)
Physical: by improving the infrastructure, well-being, occupational opportunities and living environment
Constitutional: by facilitating equal participation opportunities, education and awareness, providing adequate skills and social support system
Motivational: by building awareness and facilitating self organisation
9
Risk Management
IFM: PrinciplesIFM: Principles
• Mitigation and Preparedness
• Response• Recovery and
rehabilitation• Residual risks
10
Risk ManagementWater Cycle as a whole
IFM: PrinciplesIFM: Principles
– Flood and drought management– Effective use of flood waters– Ground water and surface water
interaction in flood plains
11
Risk ManagementWater Cycle as a wholeMulti-hazard approach
IFM: PrinciplesIFM: Principles
– Particularly within a basin where there is interaction between various hazard development mechanisms
– Cross-sectoral integration of disaster management strategies
– Disaster risk assessment– Early warning and forecasts
12
Risk ManagementWater Cycle as a wholeMulti-hazard approachRiver basin as a planning unit
IFM: PrinciplesIFM: Principles
13
Risk ManagementWater Cycle as a wholeMulti-hazard approachRiver basin as a planning unit
Inter-disciplinary
IFM: PrinciplesIFM: Principles
14
Risk ManagementWater Cycle as a wholeMulti-hazard approachRiver basin as a planning unit
Inter-disciplinaryStakeholders participation
IFM: PrinciplesIFM: Principles
1DM23456
CreatorsAdvisors
Reviewers
Observers
Unsurprised Apathetic
1DM23456
CreatorsAdvisors
Reviewers
Observers
Unsurprised Apathetic
15
IFM:IFM: Adaptive Management Adaptive Management
16
with a multidisciplinary approach– Appropriate Institutional structures for proper
coordination and linkages;– Enabling participatory processes; and– Information management and exchange mechanisms.
Requirements of IFMRequirements of IFM
Clear and objective policiesClear and objective policies• Comprehensive assessment and understanding of development opportunities and flood risks;• Multi-sectoral approach to reach the objectives;• Appropriate legislation and regulations; and• Innovative economic instruments.
17
National Development PolicyNational Development Policy
• Natural resources management (including water resources for domestic, agriculture, fishery, and industry
• Land use management (agriculture, industry, dwelling, urban development, etc)
• Environmental management (conservation and modification)
• Risk management policies, and
• Social development issues (living conditions, level of poverty, equity and fairness principles)
18
National Flood Management Policy:The vision
• Why flood management needs to be improved;• How risks due to floods are to be mitigated while
making use of floodplains; and• When specific goals would be achieved.
19
National Flood Management Policy
• What role do the flood plains play in the economy of the country/region?
• What issues in National development vision/policy have relevance to the condition of floods or flooding and its management?
• How flood management can contribute to the national development?
• How flood risks can be appropriately factored in national development planning?
• How national development vision/policy should be aligned to the existing and future flood risks?
• How flood risks are shared between federal, state, and local governments on one hand and the individual on the other?
• What role do the different institutions play in flood management?
20
Urban Flood ManagementIntegrated with River Flood Management
LAND USE PLANNING
Storm Water Management
Plans
BasinFlood Management
Plans
Principales
Plans
Concepts
Risk ManagementSustainable Urban Drainage Systems
Total Water Cycle Management
Integrated Flood Management
IWRM Plans
SPATIAL PLANNING
Coastal Zone Management
21
Basin flood management vision
and policy
Flood risk assessment
Identification and selection of options to
reduce flood risks
Setting target for basin flood management plan
Project implementation plan
Basin Flood Management Plan
Survey and AnalysisHydrological, meteorological, geomorphologic data, environmental dataSocial and economical data