Quick Guide Post Disaster Debris Management

Publication language
English
Pages
6pp
Date published
01 Jan 2007
Type
Tools, guidelines and methodologies
Keywords
Logistics, Shelter and housing

The process of collecting, sorting and reusing debris following a disaster also provides a way to immediately provide funds and other resources into a disaster-affected community, for instance through labor-intensive public works cleanup programs. This input of resources assists disaster survivors in financing grassroots post-disaster recovery.


This Quick Guide focuses on disaster debris, or the physical items which have been damaged as a result of the disaster and can no longer be used as originally intended. Disaster debris can include:
• Household items,
• Vehicles,
• Personal possessions,
• Damaged or destroyed buildings, including bricks, broken concrete, reinforcing iron, wood, roofing, electrical wiring and piping,
• Materials from damage to roads, railways and other infrastructure,
• Materials collected in irrigation canals, water ponds, lagoons and rivers,
• Hazardous materials, and,
• Sand, gravel and wood and other vegetative matter transported by disaster agents.