India to Get National Database on Disasters by 2020: Here’s Why It Matters

India, being a signatory to the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (SFDRR), has set targets to manage disasters and ensure that losses incurred after each catastrophe are less than the previous ones.

India to Get National Database on Disasters by 2020: Here’s Why It Matters

Natural and human-made disasters make news quite often in India. Be it the disastrous floods in Uttarakhand and Himachal Pradesh or the droughts in Maharashtra, these disasters have taken hundreds of lives and cost India heavily in finances and resources. Also, the Central Government is constantly trying to tackle the losses that result from these disasters.

India, being a signatory to the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (SFDRR), has set targets to manage disasters and ensure that losses incurred after each catastrophe are less than the previous ones.

These targets, under the SFDRR agreement, include a reduction in the number of deaths, economic losses and damage to infrastructure along with a general reduction in the number of people impacted.

Calculating these numbers and the progress in meeting targets set in the agreement cannot be done without a proper database on the impact of previous disasters.

The National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA) under the government of India has thus planned to create a national database on disasters in the next two years.

Floods swept away houses in Uttarakhand. Source.

This national database will carry vital information that will help the government reach targets set by the SFDRR agreement such as gender and income class of the affected people.


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Kamal Kishore, an official from NDMA, told the Hindustan Times, “We will try and provide data that are as disaggregated as possible, by space and gender. For a large country like India, aggregated data collected at the state level is not as useful. It has to go down further to district(s) and preferably, block levels.”

India is vulnerable to over 30 types of disasters like droughts, cyclone and earthquakes, apart from human-made disasters like fires etc.

A chart by NDMA. Source.

The current database of NDMA has very little information about past disasters and vulnerability charts. Although they profile those areas in India that are vulnerable to different disasters, the only data about past disasters in their location, nature and number of fatalities.

A detailed database on disasters will certainly put their magnitude in perspective and give both, the government and citizens a chart to map the progress made in disaster management.

(Edited By Vinayak Hegde)

Featured image source: Flickr.

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