NOTABLE EVENTS AND DISASTERS OF 2014
HIGHLIGHTS OF FLOODS
2014: FLOODS ARE A GLOBAL
NATURAL HAZARD CONTINUUM
• FLOODS
• SEVERE
WINDSTORMS
• EARTHQUAKES
• DROUGHTS
• VOLCANIC
ERUPTIONS
• ETC.
FLOODS
• Floods occur somewhere in the
world 10,000 times or more
each year.
FLOOD-INDUCED LANDSLIDES
• Many of the global flood
occurrences also trigger
landslides, mudslides,
mudflows, and rock falls.
FLOODS
• Floods, which can be either
slow onset or rapid onset
events (i.e., flash floods), occur
when a locale can not process
the amount of water that it is
receiving in a normal manner.
FLOODS
occur when water accumulates
too rapidly to be processed in
the locale from: a) natural
events such as rainfall and
snow melt, b) storm surge and
heavy rain from hurricanes and
typhoons, and c) tsunami waves
THE “PINEAPPLE EXPRESS”
FLOODS
• Pineapple Express is a non-
technical, meteorological term for
an “atmospheric river” of moisture
from the waters adjacent to the
Hawaiian Islands that extend to
any location along the Pacific
coast of North America.
LOSS OF FUNCTION OF
STRUCTURES IN FLOODPLAIN
FLOODS
INUNDATION
INTERACTION WITH
HAZARDOUS MATERIALS
STRUCTURAL/CONTENTS
DAMAGE FROM WATER
WATER BORNE DISEASES
(HEALTH PROBLEMS)
EROSION AND MUDFLOWS
CONTAMINATION OF GROUND
WATER
CAUSES
OF RISK
CASE HISTORIES
WIND PENETRATING
BUILDING ENVELOPE
SEVERE
WINDSTORMS
UPLIFT OF ROOF SYSTEM
FLYING DEBRIS
STORM SURGE
IRREGULARITIES IN
ELEVATION AND PLAN
SITING PROBLEMS
FLOODING AND LANDSLIDES
CAUSES
OF
DAMAGE
“DISASTER
LABORATORIES”
HIGH VELOCITY IMPACT OF
INCOMING WAVES
TSUNAMIS
INLAND DISTANCE OF WAVE
RUNUP
VERTICAL HEIGHT OF WAVE
RUNUP
INADEQUATE RESISTANCE OF
BUILDINGS
FLOODING
INADEQUATE HORIZONTAL
AND VERTICAL EVACUATION
PROXIMITY TO SOURCE OF
TSUNAMI
CAUSES
OF
DAMAGE
“DISASTER
LABORATORIES”
NOTE: INUNDATION BECOMES
A POTENTIAL DISASTER AGENT
WHEN IT a) TRIGGERS LANDSLIDES,
b) INTERACTS WITH A COMMUNITY’S
BUILDINGS, CRITICAL
INFRASTRUCTURE, CROPS, AND c)
CREATES A FAVORABLE
ENVIRONMENT FOR INFECTIOUS
DISEASES
2014: EXAMPLES OF NOTABLE
FLOOD EVENTS
FLOOD EVENTS
Flood-induced Mudslide in Washington
After the Iquique, Chile Tsunami
After Typhoon Hagupit in The
Philippines
The “Pineapple Express” in California
FLOOD-INDUCED
MUDSLIDE IN WASHINGTON
STATE, USA
SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014
LOCATION MAP
THE 2014 MUDSLIDE
• The slide, which occurred on
Saturday morning, was
triggered by heavy rainfall and
reported to be about 25 m (80
feet) deep in some parts.
THE 2014 MUDSLIDE
• Officials described the
mudslide as "a big wall of mud
and debris” that blocked about
a mile of State Route 530 near
the town of Oso, about 55 miles
north of Seattle.
WALL OF MUD MOVED
AFTER HEAVY RAINFALL
THE MUDSLIDE
THE MUDSLIDE
NEITHER THE LOCATION
NOR THE EVENT WERE A
SURPRISE
PRIOR PREPAREDNESS
ACTIVITIES
• In 2006 after a smaller landslide
occurred on the north fork of
the Stillaguamish River,
millions of dollars were spent
on regional mitigation
measures.
PRIOR PREPAREDNESS
ACTIVITIES
• In 2010, a report commissioned
by the county in order to be in
compliance with federal
regulations identified the
hillside that collapsed Saturday
outside of the community of
Oso as particularly susceptible.
The 15 million cubic foot
mudslide destroyed about
50 homes
PREPARING FOR SEARCH
AND RESCUE
THE DILEMNA FOR SEARCH
AND RESCUE TEAMS
• The debris pile was about a square mile
(2 1/2 square kilometers) and 30 to 80
feet (9 to 25 meters) deep in places,
with a surface that includes quicksand-
like muck, rain-slickened mud, and ice.
• The terrain was difficult to navigate on
foot and very treacherous when heavy
equipment was brought in.
THE DILEMNA FOR SEARCH
AND RESCUE TEAMS
• To make matters worse, the debris
pile includes other hazards such
as fallen trees, propane and septic
tanks, twisted vehicles, and
countless pieces of shattered
homes
--- AND CONTINUING
RAINFALL INCREASED THE
LIKELIHOOD OF FLASH
FLOODS AND ADDITIONAL
MUDSLIDES
SAR: SLOW, DANGEROUS WORK
WITH FEW SUCCESSES
176 MISSING
14 DEAD
AS OF TUESDAY, MARCH 25
BUT RESCUE EFFORTS
CONTINUED….
Specialized teams and high-
tech equipment — including
technology to locate
cellphone pings under the
wreckage — were deployed
SLOW DANGEROUS WORK
Due to the dangerous
environment, as bodies were
being discovered underneath the
rubble, they are being flown out
together in groups each afternoon
instead of one at a time in
helicopters.
TSUNAMI WAVE RUN UP
IN IQUIQUE, CHILE
APRIL 1, 2014
IQUIQUE, CHILE
EARTHQUAKE (April 1, 2014)
IQUIQUE, CHILE: FLOODING
FROM TSUNAMI WAVE RUN UP
TYPHOON HAGUPIT
STRIKES THE PHILIPPINES
December 6-8, 2014
Typhoon Hagupit made a
painfully slow landfall at 11
kph (7 mph) in the Philippines
on Saturday, lashing the island
of Samar with 200 kph (125
mph) winds and unloading at
least 40 cm (16 in) of rain over
coastal areas.
Typhoon Hagupit, known
locally asTyphoon Ruby, first
landed at Eastern Samar on
Saturday and moved slowly
across the country, bringing
heavy rains and strong winds.
3 DAYS OF HEAVY RAINFALL
At least 21 people in the
Philippines were killed before
Typhoon Hagupit weakened
into a tropical storm Monday.
The storm forced more than
one million people out of their
homes and into shelters.
THE “PINEAPPLE EXPRESS”
STRIKES CALIFORNIA
11-14 DECEMBER 2014
A weather system fueled by the
"Pineapple Express," a long,
narrow atmospheric plume that
continuously piped moisture from
Hawaii into the western United
States, started delivering heavy
rainfall to the San Francisco area
and the entire state on 10
December.
RAIN, AND MORE RAIN
RAIN-INDUCED MUDSLIDE:
PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY
RAIN-INDUCED ROCK SLIDE:
SOME HOUSES BURIED
BEYOND 2014:
Communities throughout the
world know why it is urgent for
their stakeholders to continue
working on becoming FLOOD
and FLOOD-INDUCED
LANDSLIDE DISASTER
RESILIENT
Each community knows that it
is only a matter of time until the
inevitable flood event e occurs
that can expose its physical and
social vulnerabilities
YOUR
COMMUNITY
DATA BASES
AND INFORMATION
HAZARDS:
GROUND SHAKING
GROUND FAILURE
SURFACE FAULTING
TECTONIC DEFORMATION
TSUNAMI RUN UP
AFTERSHOCKS
•MONITORING
•HAZARD MAPS
•INVENTORY
•VULNERABILITY
•LOCATION
RISK
ACCEPTABLE RISK
UNACCEPTABLE RISK
BOOKS OF
KNOWLEDGE
•PREPAREDNESS
•PROTECTION
•EARLY WARNING
•EM RESPONSE
•RECOSTRUCTION AND
RECOVERY
FLOOD DISASTER
RESILIENCE
THE PEOPLE CONTINUUM
7 + BILLION
(DISTRIBUTED IN
COMMUN-ITIES
AND RURAL
AREAS
THROUGHOUT
THE WORLD)
THE COMMUNITY CONTINUUM: (BUILDINGS.
INFRASTRUCTURE, ENTERPRISE)
• GOVERNMENTS
• DWELLINGS
• SCHOOLS
• HEALTH CARE
FACILITIES
• BUSINESSES
• INFRA-
STRUCTURE
THE REASONS FOR A FLOOD
DISASTER TO OCCUR. . .
The community is UN-PREPARED
for the flood hazards
(INUNDATION, LANDSLIDES, etc.,)
that are likely to happen.
THE REASONS ARE . . .
The community has NO DISASTER
PLANNING SCENARIO or LAND USE
PLANS or ORDINANCES in place as
a strategic framework for
identification and coordinated local,
national, regional, and international
countermeasures.
THE REASONS ARE . . .
The community has NO EARLY
WARNING SYSTEM or COMMINITY
EVACUATION PLANS in place as a
strategic framework for identi-
fication and coordinated local,
national, regional, and international
countermeasures.
THE REASONS ARE . . .
The community LACKS THE
CAPACITY TO RESPOND to the
full spectrum of expected and
unexpected emergency
situations in a timely and cost-
effective manner.
THE REASONS ARE . . .
The community is INEFFECIVE
during recovery and
reconstruction because it HAS
NOT LEARNED IMPORTANT
LESSONS from either the current
experience or the cumulative
prior experiences.

Part 4. 2014 notable disasters. floods

  • 1.
    NOTABLE EVENTS ANDDISASTERS OF 2014 HIGHLIGHTS OF FLOODS
  • 2.
    2014: FLOODS AREA GLOBAL NATURAL HAZARD CONTINUUM • FLOODS • SEVERE WINDSTORMS • EARTHQUAKES • DROUGHTS • VOLCANIC ERUPTIONS • ETC.
  • 3.
    FLOODS • Floods occursomewhere in the world 10,000 times or more each year.
  • 4.
    FLOOD-INDUCED LANDSLIDES • Manyof the global flood occurrences also trigger landslides, mudslides, mudflows, and rock falls.
  • 5.
    FLOODS • Floods, whichcan be either slow onset or rapid onset events (i.e., flash floods), occur when a locale can not process the amount of water that it is receiving in a normal manner.
  • 6.
    FLOODS occur when wateraccumulates too rapidly to be processed in the locale from: a) natural events such as rainfall and snow melt, b) storm surge and heavy rain from hurricanes and typhoons, and c) tsunami waves
  • 9.
    THE “PINEAPPLE EXPRESS” FLOODS •Pineapple Express is a non- technical, meteorological term for an “atmospheric river” of moisture from the waters adjacent to the Hawaiian Islands that extend to any location along the Pacific coast of North America.
  • 10.
    LOSS OF FUNCTIONOF STRUCTURES IN FLOODPLAIN FLOODS INUNDATION INTERACTION WITH HAZARDOUS MATERIALS STRUCTURAL/CONTENTS DAMAGE FROM WATER WATER BORNE DISEASES (HEALTH PROBLEMS) EROSION AND MUDFLOWS CONTAMINATION OF GROUND WATER CAUSES OF RISK CASE HISTORIES
  • 11.
    WIND PENETRATING BUILDING ENVELOPE SEVERE WINDSTORMS UPLIFTOF ROOF SYSTEM FLYING DEBRIS STORM SURGE IRREGULARITIES IN ELEVATION AND PLAN SITING PROBLEMS FLOODING AND LANDSLIDES CAUSES OF DAMAGE “DISASTER LABORATORIES”
  • 12.
    HIGH VELOCITY IMPACTOF INCOMING WAVES TSUNAMIS INLAND DISTANCE OF WAVE RUNUP VERTICAL HEIGHT OF WAVE RUNUP INADEQUATE RESISTANCE OF BUILDINGS FLOODING INADEQUATE HORIZONTAL AND VERTICAL EVACUATION PROXIMITY TO SOURCE OF TSUNAMI CAUSES OF DAMAGE “DISASTER LABORATORIES”
  • 13.
    NOTE: INUNDATION BECOMES APOTENTIAL DISASTER AGENT WHEN IT a) TRIGGERS LANDSLIDES, b) INTERACTS WITH A COMMUNITY’S BUILDINGS, CRITICAL INFRASTRUCTURE, CROPS, AND c) CREATES A FAVORABLE ENVIRONMENT FOR INFECTIOUS DISEASES
  • 14.
    2014: EXAMPLES OFNOTABLE FLOOD EVENTS FLOOD EVENTS Flood-induced Mudslide in Washington After the Iquique, Chile Tsunami After Typhoon Hagupit in The Philippines The “Pineapple Express” in California
  • 15.
    FLOOD-INDUCED MUDSLIDE IN WASHINGTON STATE,USA SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 2014
  • 16.
  • 17.
    THE 2014 MUDSLIDE •The slide, which occurred on Saturday morning, was triggered by heavy rainfall and reported to be about 25 m (80 feet) deep in some parts.
  • 18.
    THE 2014 MUDSLIDE •Officials described the mudslide as "a big wall of mud and debris” that blocked about a mile of State Route 530 near the town of Oso, about 55 miles north of Seattle.
  • 19.
    WALL OF MUDMOVED AFTER HEAVY RAINFALL
  • 20.
  • 21.
  • 22.
    NEITHER THE LOCATION NORTHE EVENT WERE A SURPRISE
  • 23.
    PRIOR PREPAREDNESS ACTIVITIES • In2006 after a smaller landslide occurred on the north fork of the Stillaguamish River, millions of dollars were spent on regional mitigation measures.
  • 24.
    PRIOR PREPAREDNESS ACTIVITIES • In2010, a report commissioned by the county in order to be in compliance with federal regulations identified the hillside that collapsed Saturday outside of the community of Oso as particularly susceptible.
  • 25.
    The 15 millioncubic foot mudslide destroyed about 50 homes
  • 26.
  • 27.
    THE DILEMNA FORSEARCH AND RESCUE TEAMS • The debris pile was about a square mile (2 1/2 square kilometers) and 30 to 80 feet (9 to 25 meters) deep in places, with a surface that includes quicksand- like muck, rain-slickened mud, and ice. • The terrain was difficult to navigate on foot and very treacherous when heavy equipment was brought in.
  • 28.
    THE DILEMNA FORSEARCH AND RESCUE TEAMS • To make matters worse, the debris pile includes other hazards such as fallen trees, propane and septic tanks, twisted vehicles, and countless pieces of shattered homes
  • 29.
    --- AND CONTINUING RAINFALLINCREASED THE LIKELIHOOD OF FLASH FLOODS AND ADDITIONAL MUDSLIDES
  • 30.
    SAR: SLOW, DANGEROUSWORK WITH FEW SUCCESSES
  • 31.
    176 MISSING 14 DEAD ASOF TUESDAY, MARCH 25
  • 32.
  • 33.
    Specialized teams andhigh- tech equipment — including technology to locate cellphone pings under the wreckage — were deployed
  • 34.
  • 35.
    Due to thedangerous environment, as bodies were being discovered underneath the rubble, they are being flown out together in groups each afternoon instead of one at a time in helicopters.
  • 36.
    TSUNAMI WAVE RUNUP IN IQUIQUE, CHILE APRIL 1, 2014
  • 37.
  • 38.
    IQUIQUE, CHILE: FLOODING FROMTSUNAMI WAVE RUN UP
  • 39.
    TYPHOON HAGUPIT STRIKES THEPHILIPPINES December 6-8, 2014
  • 40.
    Typhoon Hagupit madea painfully slow landfall at 11 kph (7 mph) in the Philippines on Saturday, lashing the island of Samar with 200 kph (125 mph) winds and unloading at least 40 cm (16 in) of rain over coastal areas.
  • 41.
    Typhoon Hagupit, known locallyasTyphoon Ruby, first landed at Eastern Samar on Saturday and moved slowly across the country, bringing heavy rains and strong winds.
  • 42.
    3 DAYS OFHEAVY RAINFALL
  • 43.
    At least 21people in the Philippines were killed before Typhoon Hagupit weakened into a tropical storm Monday. The storm forced more than one million people out of their homes and into shelters.
  • 44.
    THE “PINEAPPLE EXPRESS” STRIKESCALIFORNIA 11-14 DECEMBER 2014
  • 45.
    A weather systemfueled by the "Pineapple Express," a long, narrow atmospheric plume that continuously piped moisture from Hawaii into the western United States, started delivering heavy rainfall to the San Francisco area and the entire state on 10 December.
  • 46.
  • 47.
  • 48.
  • 49.
    BEYOND 2014: Communities throughoutthe world know why it is urgent for their stakeholders to continue working on becoming FLOOD and FLOOD-INDUCED LANDSLIDE DISASTER RESILIENT
  • 50.
    Each community knowsthat it is only a matter of time until the inevitable flood event e occurs that can expose its physical and social vulnerabilities
  • 51.
    YOUR COMMUNITY DATA BASES AND INFORMATION HAZARDS: GROUNDSHAKING GROUND FAILURE SURFACE FAULTING TECTONIC DEFORMATION TSUNAMI RUN UP AFTERSHOCKS •MONITORING •HAZARD MAPS •INVENTORY •VULNERABILITY •LOCATION RISK ACCEPTABLE RISK UNACCEPTABLE RISK BOOKS OF KNOWLEDGE •PREPAREDNESS •PROTECTION •EARLY WARNING •EM RESPONSE •RECOSTRUCTION AND RECOVERY FLOOD DISASTER RESILIENCE
  • 52.
    THE PEOPLE CONTINUUM 7+ BILLION (DISTRIBUTED IN COMMUN-ITIES AND RURAL AREAS THROUGHOUT THE WORLD)
  • 53.
    THE COMMUNITY CONTINUUM:(BUILDINGS. INFRASTRUCTURE, ENTERPRISE) • GOVERNMENTS • DWELLINGS • SCHOOLS • HEALTH CARE FACILITIES • BUSINESSES • INFRA- STRUCTURE
  • 54.
    THE REASONS FORA FLOOD DISASTER TO OCCUR. . . The community is UN-PREPARED for the flood hazards (INUNDATION, LANDSLIDES, etc.,) that are likely to happen.
  • 55.
    THE REASONS ARE. . . The community has NO DISASTER PLANNING SCENARIO or LAND USE PLANS or ORDINANCES in place as a strategic framework for identification and coordinated local, national, regional, and international countermeasures.
  • 56.
    THE REASONS ARE. . . The community has NO EARLY WARNING SYSTEM or COMMINITY EVACUATION PLANS in place as a strategic framework for identi- fication and coordinated local, national, regional, and international countermeasures.
  • 57.
    THE REASONS ARE. . . The community LACKS THE CAPACITY TO RESPOND to the full spectrum of expected and unexpected emergency situations in a timely and cost- effective manner.
  • 58.
    THE REASONS ARE. . . The community is INEFFECIVE during recovery and reconstruction because it HAS NOT LEARNED IMPORTANT LESSONS from either the current experience or the cumulative prior experiences.