Citizens' Disaster Response Center's experience of urban response - lessons from the Philippines

Author(s)
Padolina, C.
Publication language
English
Pages
23pp
Date published
17 Jan 2012
Type
Presentations
Keywords
Response and recovery, Urban

 The Philippines is one of the most disaster-prone countries in the world. In the World Disasters Reports,
the Philippines ranked consistently among the top five countries affected by natural disasters.

Within Asia, it is one of the countries that is affected and will continue to be affected by the impacts of
climate change. While it normally experiences at least 20 typhoons a year, the recent years saw more
disaster events and were influenced by climate change. The notable changes in the climate of the
Philippines include increasing temperature, rising sea level and increased frequency of extreme events.

Recently, the Asian Development Bank (ADB), in a report titled "Climate Risks and Adaptation in Asian
Coastal Megacities," warned of more massive flooding incidents in Asia’s coastal megacities, including
Manila. The ADB said urban poor populations are likely to be the hardest hit. Megacities – with more
than 10 million inhabitants – are springing up across the globe, particularly in developing countries.
Greater Manila is home to 20 million people, rising by another quarter of a million every year. A third of
Manilans live in makeshift settlements, under bridges, next to railway lines, on floodplains, and beside
flood defences, making them highly vulnerable to natural and human-induced disasters. People live in
adverse socio-economic situations that lead them to inhabit high risk areas and engage in unsustainable
and dangerous livelihoods.
Earthquakes, although a national occurrence with at least 5 faint shakes experienced on a daily basis,
threaten to hit any part of the country anytime due to the fact that the archipelago lies between 2 of the
7 major tectonic plates in the earth’s lithosphere. But despite the findings of a scientific study jointly
conducted in 2002-2004 by the Metropolitan Manila Development Authority (MMDA), Philippine
Institute of Volcanology and Seismology (PHIVOLCS) and the Japan International Cooperation Agency
(JICA) forewarning of a destructive magnitude earthquake in Metro Manila, the government has taken
no bold preparatory steps just yet.