Cyclone Phailin: Superior Preparedness Could Reduce Casualties
The document summarizes India's superior preparedness and response to Cyclone Phailin compared to previous storms. Measures taken included building cyclone shelters within 2.5 km of all habitations, allowing over 500,000 people to be evacuated. Early and accurate warnings from Doppler radar in Bhubaneswar facilitated timely evacuations. Coordination between central and state agencies was improved compared to previous disasters. These enhanced precautions and coordination helped reduce casualties from the powerful cyclone.
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Cyclone Phailin: Superior Preparedness Could Reduce Casualties
The document summarizes India's superior preparedness and response to Cyclone Phailin compared to previous storms. Measures taken included building cyclone shelters within 2.5 km of all habitations, allowing over 500,000 people to be evacuated. Early and accurate warnings from Doppler radar in Bhubaneswar facilitated timely evacuations. Coordination between central and state agencies was improved compared to previous disasters. These enhanced precautions and coordination helped reduce casualties from the powerful cyclone.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Cyclone Phailin: Superior preparedness
could reduce casualties:
If there was a silver lining in the grim foreboding of a monster storm, it's the realization that lives aren't that cheap in India any longer. For, the measures taken by the administration in the run-up to Cyclone Phailinto reduce casualties and minimize losses doesn't have parallels.
The superior preparedness and response this time for disaster is in sharp contrast to previous disastrous storms like the 1999 super cyclone. They are also in contrast with the Uttarakhand disaster when the state authorities were caught flat-footed. This time disaster management authorities are confident of meeting the challenge with minimal casualty.
The coastline has been dotted with cyclone shelters, none of them more than 2.5 km from habitation. This has ensured that over 5 lakh people could be evacuated in last two days. Otherwise, moving such large numbers could have been impossible.
Nothing has helped more than an early and accurate warning of the impending natural disaster. Though the met department did predict cyclones alerts even in 1999 based on satellite images, these were mostly too close to the landfall and not pinpointed in terms of location.
Today, there is a Doppler radar in place at Bhubaneswar, giving out precise coordinates in terms of geographical spread, intensity and timing of cyclones. This enables early alerts to the local authorities and wider dissemination of cyclone warnings in the vulnerable areas, facilitating timely evacuation of people likely to be affected.
The electronic media boom and 24x7 news coverage further ensured that Phailin became a household name well before its landfall.
Evacuations play a key part in disaster mitigation. Unlike 1999 when the super cyclone caught the victims as well as government authorities by surprise, around 5.25 lakh evacuations were already complete by the first half of Saturday.
The cyclone shelters have been built under the Centre and NDMA's National Cyclone Risk Mitigation Project, a World Bank-assisted initiative. These two- storeyed structures can withstand windspeed up to 300 km per hour and moderate earthquakes.
The massive evacuation authorities may not have been possible but for the relentless efforts of the local administration. A local official said when some of the villagers refused to leave their houses, the authorities even went to the extent of threatening them with detention and arrest, ensuring immediate compliance.
The creation of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) in 2006 ensured that there were around 2,300 personnel, especially trained in disaster mitigation and response, available for deployment, along with equipment like inflatable boads, lifebuoys and power saws.
Incidentally, Odisha had set up its own Odisha State Disaster Management Authority and Odisha Disaster Rapid Action Force (ODRAF) soon the 1999 disaster, much before the NDMA and NDRF came into being.
Last but not the least, the coordination between the Central and state agencies this time was "remarkably good", as an NDMA member put it, with IMD religiously relaying cyclone updates to NDMA, MHA and state government.
The national executive council, which was almost non-functional until the Uttarakhand disaster, has been very active, with the Union home secretary taking daily meetings over the last couple of days, coordinating mitigation and relief preparedness with various nodal ministries, Armed Forces, NDRF and state authorities.