Description
Five Year Plan documents have, historically, not included consideration of issues relating to the management and mitigation of natural disasters. The traditional perception has been limited to the idea of "calamity relief", which is seen essentially as a non-plan item of expenditure.
189
7.1 Five Year Plan documents have, histori-
cally, not included consideration of issues relating
to the management and mitigation of natural
disasters. The traditional perception has been
limited to the idea of “calamity relief”, which is seen
essentially as a non-plan item of expenditure.
However, the impact of major disasters cannot be
mitigated by the provision of immediate relief alone,
which is the primary focus of calamity relief efforts.
Disasters can have devastating effects on the
economy; they cause huge human and economic
losses, and can significantly set back development
efforts of a region or a State. Two recent disasters,
the Orissa Cyclone and the Gujarat Earthquake,
are cases in point. With the kind of economic losses
and developmental setbacks that the country has
been suffering year after year, the development
process needs to be sensitive towards disaster
prevention and mitigation aspects. There is thus
need to look at disasters from a development
perspective as well.
7.2 Further, although disaster management is
not generally associated with plan financing, there
are in fact a number of plan schemes in operation,
such as for drought proofing, afforestation, drinking
water, etc., which deal with the prevention and
mitigation of the impact of natural disasters. Exter-
nal assistance for post-disaster reconstruction and
streamlining of management structures also is a
part of the Plan. A specific, centrally sponsored
scheme on disaster management also exists. The
Plan thus already has a defined role in dealing with
the subject.
7.3 Recently, expert bodies have dwelt on the
role of the Planning Commission and the use of
plan funds in the context of disaster management.
Suggestions have been made in this regard by the
Eleventh Finance Commission, and also the High
Powered Committee on Disaster Management. An
approach on planning for safe development needs
to be set out in the light of these suggestions.
7.4 This chapter reflects the considerations
outlined above. It briefly outlines the global context
and the Indian experience of disasters, sets out the
institutional and financial arrangements for disaster
management and the response towards these in
the country, looks at directions for improvement,
and concludes with a strategy to facilitate planning
for safe national development in the Tenth Plan
period.
THE GLOBAL CONTEXT
7.5 There has been an increase in the number
of natural disasters over the past years, and with it,
increasing losses on account of urbanisation and
population growth, as a result of which the impact
of natural disasters is now felt to a larger extent.
According to the United Nations, in 2001 alone,
natural disasters of medium to high range caused
at least 25,000 deaths around the world, more than
double the previous year, and economic losses of
around US $ 36 billion. These figures would be
much higher, if the consequences of the many
smaller and unrecorded disasters that cause
significant losses at the local community level were
to be taken into account. Devastations in the
aftermath of powerful earthquakes that struck
Gujarat, El Salvador and Peru; floods that ravaged
many countries in Africa, Asia and elsewhere;
droughts that plagued Central Asia including
Afghanistan, Africa and Central America; the
cyclone in Madagascar and Orissa; and floods in
Bolivia are global events in recent memory.
However, what is disturbing is the knowledge that
these trends of destruction and devastation are on
the rise instead of being kept in check.
CHAPTER – 7
DISASTER MANAGEMENT:
THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
190
7.6 Natural disasters are not bound by political
boundaries and have no social or economic consi-
derations. They are borderless as they affect both
developing and developed countries. They are also
merciless, and as such the vulnerable tend to suffer
more at the impact of natural disasters. For
example, the developing countries are much more
seriously affected in terms of the loss of lives,
hardship borne by population and the percentage
of their GNP lost. Since 1991, two-third of the victims
of natural disasters were from developing countries,
while just 2 per cent were from highly developed
nations. Those living in developing countries and
especially those with limited resources tend to be
more adversely affected. With the alarming rise in
the natural disasters and vulnera-bility per se, the
world community is strengthening its efforts to cope
with it.
7.7 As a number of the most vulnerable
regions are in India, natural disaster management
has emerged as a high priority for the country.
Going beyond the historical focus on relief and
rehabilitation after the event, we now have to look
ahead and plan for disaster preparedness and
mitigation, in order that the periodic shocks to our
development efforts are minimized.
THE INDIAN EXPERIENCE
Regional Vulnerabilities
7.8 Physical vulnerability relates to the
physical location of people, their proximity to the
hazard zone and standards of safety maintained to
counter the effects. For instance, some people are
vulnerable to flood only because they live in a flood
prone area. Physical vulnerability also relates to
the technical capacity of buildings and structures
to resist the forces acting upon them during a hazard
event.
7.9 The extent to which a population is affec-
ted by a calamity does not purely lie in the physical
components of vulnerability, but is contextual also
to the prevailing social and economic conditions and
it’s consequential effect on human activities within
a given society. Research in areas affected by
earthquakes indicates that single parent families,
women, handicapped people, children and the aged
are particularly vulnerable social groups. The geo-
physical setting with unplanned and inadequate
developmental activity is a cause for increased
losses during disasters. In the case of India, the
contribution of over-population to high population
density, which in turn results in escalating losses,
deserves to be noted. This factor sometimes tends
to be as important as physical vulnerability attributed
to geography and infrastructure alone.
7.10 The continent of Asia is particularly vulner-
able to disaster strikes. Between the years 1991 to
2000 Asia has accounted for 83 per cent of the
population affected by disasters globally. While the
number of people affected in the rest of the world
were 1,11,159, in Asia the number was 5,54,439.
1
Within Asia, 24 per cent of deaths due to disasters
occur in India, on account of its size, population and
vulnerability. Floods and high winds account for 60
per cent of all disasters in India. While substantial
progress has been made in other sectors of human
development, there is need to do more towards
mitigating the effect of disasters.
7.11 Many parts of the Indian sub-continent are
susceptible to different types of disasters owing to
the unique topographic and climatic characteristics.
About 54 per cent of the sub-continent’s landmass
is vulnerable to earthquakes while about 4 crore
hectares is vulnerable to periodic floods. The
Box 7.1
INDIA’S KEY VULNERABILITIES
Coastal States, particularly in the East Coast and
Gujarat are vulnerable to cyclones.
4 crore hectare land mass is vulnerable to floods.
68 per cent of net sown area is vulnerable to
drought.
55 per cent of total area is in Seismic Zones III - V,
and vulnerable to earthquakes.
Sub-Himalayan/Western Ghat is vulnerable to
landslides.
1. World Disasters Report, IFRC, 2001
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
191
decade 1990-2000, has been one of very high
disaster losses within the country, losses in the
Orissa Cyclone in 1999, and later, the Gujarat
Earthquake in 2001 alone amount to several thou-
sand crore of Rupees, while the total expenditure
on relief and reconstruction in Gujarat alone has
been to the tune of Rs 11,500 crore.
2
7.12 Similarly, the country has suffered four
major earthquakes in the span of last fifty years
along with a series of moderate intensity
earthquakes that have occurred at regular intervals.
Since 1988, six earthquakes have struck different
parts of the country. These caused considerable
human and property losses.
7.14 Disasters may also reduce availability of
new investment, further constricting the growth of
the region. Besides, additional pressures may be
imposed on finances of the government through
investments in relief and rehabilitation work.
7.15 In the recent earthquake in Gujarat, more
than 14,000 lives were lost, ten lakh houses were
damaged and the asset loss has been indicated to
be worth 15,000 crore. Tables 7.2 to 7.5 give an
indication of the magnitude of the damage and
losses incurred by the country in recent natural
disasters.
7.16 The dimensions of the damage, as evident
in the tables and the diagram 7.1 emphasise the
point that natural disasters cause major setbacks
to development and it is the poorest and the weakest
that are the most vulnerable to disasters. Given the
high frequency with which one or the other part of
the country suffers due to disasters, mitigating the
impact of disasters must be an integral component
of our development planning and be part of our
poverty reduction strategy.
INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS
7.17 The country with its federal system of
Government has specific roles for the Central and
State Governments. However, the subject of
disaster management does not specifically find
Economic Losses Due to Disasters
7.13 Disasters lead to enormous economic
losses that are both immediate as well as long term
in nature and demand additional revenues. Also,
as an immediate fall-out, disasters reduce revenues
from the affected region due to lower levels of
economic activity leading to loss of direct and
indirect taxes. In addition, unplanned budgetary
allocation to disaster recovery can hamper
development interventions and lead to unmet
developmental targets.
2. As on 11-12-2000, Gujarat Earthquake : A Case Study, NCDM,
2002, New Delhi
Box 7.2
Global Losses Through Natural Disasters
According to Reinsurance Company ‘Munich
Re’ costs associated with natural disasters has
gone up 14 fold since the 1950s. Each year from
1991 to 2000, an average of 211 million people
were killed or affected by natural disasters - seven
times greater than the figure for those killed or
affected by conflict. Towards the end of the 1990s,
the world counted some 25 million ‘environmental
refugees’- for the first time more people had fled
natural hazards than conflict.
Source: World Disasters Report, 2001
Table 7.1
Major Earthquakes in India, 1988-2001
Date Location Magnitude
August 21,1988 Bihar-Nepal Border 6.4
October 20,1991 Uttarkashi, Uttar Pradesh 6.6
September 30, 1993 Latur- Osmanabad, 6.3
Maharashtra
May 22, 1997 Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh 6.0
March 29, 1999 Chamoli, Uttar Pradesh 6.9
January 26,2001 Bhuj, Gujarat 7.7
Source : Indian Meteorological Department and US Geological Survey
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
192
Table 7.2
Damage due to Natural Disasters in India
Year People affected Houses & buildings, partially or Amount of property
(Lakh) totally, damaged damage/loss
(Rs Crore)
1985 595.6 2,449,878 40.06
1986 550.0 2,049,277 30.74
1987 483.4 2,919,380 20.57
1988 101.5 242,533 40.63
1989 30.1 782,340 20.41
1990 31.7 1,019,930 10.71
1991 342.7 1,190,109 10.90
1992 190.9 570,969 20.05
1993 262.4 1,529,916 50.80
1994 235.3 1,051,223 10.83
1995 543.5 2,088,355 40.73
1996 549.9 2,376,693 50.43
1997 443.8 1,103,549 n.a.
1998 521.7 1,563,405 0.72
1999 501.7 3,104,064 1020.97
2000 594.34 2,736,355 800.00
2001 788.19 846,878 12000
Source : Annual Reports, NDM Division, Ministry of Agriculture
Table 7.3
Annual Damage due to Heavy Rains, Landslide and Floods
S. Year Districts Villages Population Crop Area Houses Human Cattle Estimated Estimated of
No affected affected affected affected Damaged life loss loss value of value of Public
(No) (Lakh) (Lakh Ha.) (no.) (no.) (no.) loss to houses properties
(Rs. in crore) (Rs. in crore)
1 1999 202 33,158 328.12 8.45 884,823 1,375 3,861 0.72 -
2 2000 200 29,964 416.24 34.79 2,736,355 3,048 102,121 631.25 389.72
3 2001 122 32,363 210.71 18.72 346,878 834 21,269 195.57 676.05
Source : Annual Reports, Natural Disaster Management Division, Ministry of Agriculture
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
193
Table 7.4
Damage due to Cyclone in Orissa in October ’2000
Date of Total no Districts Villages Population Crop Area Houses Human Cattle
occurrence of districts affected affected affected affected Damaged life loss loss
(No) (Lakh) (Lakh Ha) (no.) (no.) (no.)
17-18.10.99 30 4 5,181 37.47 1.58 331,580 199 10,578
29-30.10.99 30 12 14,643 129.22 18.43 1,828,532 9,887 444,531
Source : Annual Reports, Natural Disaster Management Division, Ministry of Agriculture
Table 7.5
Losses due to Droughts: 1999-2001
S.No Year Districts Villages Population Damage to Estimated Cattle
affected affected affected crops area value of population
(No) (Lakh) (Lakh Ha) damaged crops affected
(Rs crore) (in lakh)
1 1999 125 - 369.88 134.22 6.44 345.60
2 2000 110 54,883 378.14 367.00 371.87 541.67
3 2001 103 22,255 88.19 67.44 NA 34.28
TOTAL 338 77,138 836.21 568.66 378.31 921.55
Source: Annual Reports, Natural Disaster Management Division, Ministry of Agriculture
Source: Central Water Commission.
Figure 7.1
Cumulative Annualised
Flood Damage (Rs. in crore)
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
194
mention in any of the three lists in the 7th Schedule
of the Indian Constitution, where subjects under the
Central and State Governments as also subjects
that come under both are specified. On the legal
front, there is no enactment either of the Central or
of any State Government to deal with the
management of disasters of various types in a
comprehensive manner.
7.18 The country has an integrated adminis-
trative machinery for management of disasters at
the National, State, District and Sub-District levels.
The basic responsibility of undertaking rescue, relief
and rehabilitation measures in the event of natural
disasters, as at present, is that of the State Govern-
ments concerned. The Central Government supple-
ments the efforts of the States by providing financial
and logistic support.
Central Level
7.19 The dimensions of response at the level
of the Central Government are determined in
accordance with the existing policy of financing relief
expenditure and keeping in view the factors like:
(i) the gravity of a natural disaster;
(ii) the scale of the relief operation necessary;
and
(iii) the requirements of Central assistance for
augmenting financial resources and
logistic support at the disposal of the State
Government.
7.20 The Contingency Action Plan (CAP) identi-
fies initiatives required to be taken by various
Central Ministries and Public Departments in the
wake of natural calamities. It sets down the
procedures and determines the focal points in the
administrative machinery to facilitate launching of
relief and rescue operations without delay.
7.21 The Ministry of Home Affairs is the nodal
Ministry for coordination of relief and response and
overall natural disaster management, and the
Department of Agriculture & Cooperation is the
nodal Ministry for drought management. Other
Ministries are assigned the responsibility of provi-
ding emergency support in case of disasters that
fall in their purview as indicated in Table 7.6.
The following decision-making and standing bodies
are responsible for disaster management at the
Central level:
•
Union Cabinet, headed by the Prime Minister.
•
Empowered Group of Ministers, headed by the
Deputy Prime Minister
•
National Crisis Management Committee
(NCMC), under the chairmanship of the
Cabinet Secretary.
•
Crisis Management Group (CMG): under the
chairmanship of the Central Relief
Commissioner comprising senior officers from
the various Ministries and other concerned
Departments which reviews contingency
plans, measures required for dealing with a
natural disaster, and co-ordinates the activities
of the Central Ministries and the State
Governments in relation to disaster
preparedness response and relief.
•
Technical Organizations, such as the Indian
Meteorological Department (cyclone/earth-
quake), Central Water Commission (floods),
Table 7.6
Ministries Responsible for Various
Categories of Disasters
Disaster Nodal Ministry
Natural Disasters Ministry of Home Affairs
Management
(other than Drought)
Drought Relief Ministry of Agriculture
Air Accidents Ministry of Civil Aviation
Railway Accidents Ministry of Railways
Chemical Disasters Ministry of Environment &
Forests
Biological Disasters Ministry of Health
Nuclear Disasters Department of Atomic
Energy
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
195
Building and Material Promotion Council (cons-
truction laws), Bureau of Indian Standards
(norms), Defence Research & Development
Organization (nuclear/biological), Directorate
General Civil Defence provide specific
technical support to coordination of disaster
response and management functions.
•
The setting up of a National Disaster Manage-
ment Authority (NDMA) is being contemplated
by the Ministry of Home Affairs as the proposed
apex structure within the government for the
purpose. Amongst other major organisational
initiatives, it is proposed to:
(a) establish a specialised and earmarked
response team for dealing with nuclear/
biological/chemical disasters;
(b) establish search and rescue teams in each
State;
(c) strengthen communication systems in the
North Eastern Region.
State Government
7.22 The responsibility to cope with natural
disasters is essentially that of the State Govern-
ment. The role of the Central Government is
supportive in terms of supplementation of physical
and financial resources. The Chief Secretary of
the State heads a state level committee which is in
overall charge of the relief operations in the State
and the Relief Commissioners who are in charge
of the relief and rehabilitation measures in the wake
of natural disasters in their States function under
the overall direction and control of the state level
committee. In many states, Secretary, Department
of Revenue, is also in-charge of relief. State
Governments usually have relief manuals and the
districts have their contingency plan that is updated
from time to time.
District and Local Level
7.23 The district administration is the focal point
for implementation of all governmental plans and
activities. The actual day-to-day function of adminis-
tering relief is the responsibility of the Collector/
District Magistrate/Deputy Commissioner who
exercises coordinating and supervising powers over
all departments at the district level. Though it may
not be a common phenomenon, there exists by and
large in districts also a district level relief committee
consisting of officials and non- officials.
7.24 The 73rd and 74th constitutional amend-
ments recognise Panchayati Raj Institutions as
‘Institutions of self- government’. The amendment
has also laid down necessary guidelines for the
structure of their composition, powers, functions,
devolution of finances, regular holding of elections
and reservation of seats for weaker sections
including women. These local bodies can be
effective instruments in tackling disasters through
early warning system, relief distribution, providing
shelter to the victims, medical assistance etc.
7.25 Other than the national, state, district and
local levels, there are various institutional stake-
holders who are involved in disaster management
at various levels in the country. These include the
police and para-military forces, civil defence and
home-guards, fire services, ex-servicemen, non-
government organisations (NGOs), public and
private sector enterprises, media and HAM
operators, all of whom have important roles to play.
Armed Forces
7.26 The Indian Armed Forces are supposed
to be called upon to intervene and take on specific
tasks only when the situation is beyond the capability
of civil administration. In practice, the Armed Forces
are the core of the government’s response capacity
and tend to be the first responders of the Govern-
ment of India in a major disaster. Due to their ability
to organize action in adverse ground circumstances,
speed of operational response and the resources
and capabilities at their disposal, the Armed Forces
have historically played a major role in emergency
support functions such as communications, search
and rescue operations, health and medical facilities,
transportation, power, food and civil supplies, public
works and engineering, especially in the immediate
aftermath of disaster. Disaster management plans
should incorporate the role expected of them so
that the procedure for deploying them is smooth
and quick.
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
196
External Linkages
7.27 The Government of India is a member of
various international organisations in the field of
disaster response and relief. While, as a policy, no
requests for assistance or appeals are made to the
international community in the event of a disaster,
assistance offered suo moto is accepted. Linkages
exist with the following organisations:
a) UN Office for Coordination of Humani-
tarian Affairs (UN OCHA), which has been
made responsible by UN General
Assembly mandate for all international
disaster response.
b) United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP), responsible for mitigation and
prevention aspects of disaster mana-
gement.
c) UN Disaster Assessment and Coordi-
nation (UNDAC) System.
Streamlining Institutional Arrangements for
Disaster Response
7.28 Institutional arrangements for disaster
response are the heart of disaster management
systems. There is no dearth of personnel, both
civilian and military, experienced in handling
situations arising out of natural disasters. However,
there certainly is a pressing need for improvement
and strengthening of existing institutional arrange-
ments and systems in this regard to make the initial
response to a disaster more effective and profes-
sional. Most of the resources and expertise needed
already exist with the Government. What needs to
be streamlined is how they should be integrated,
trained and deployed. Some of the areas where
improvement is urgently needed are:
a) Integrated planning for disasters, including
the integration of relevant Armed Forces
formations into disaster management
planning at all levels from District to State
and Central Government.
b) Setting up of a modern, permanent
national command centre or operations
room, with redundant communications
and data links to all State capitals. The
national command centre or operations
room needs to be manned on a 24-hour
basis by professionals to cater for instant
integrated response. There needs to be
a properly equipped operations room at
the State level as well.
c) Establishment of a national stand by, quick
reaction team composed of experienced
professionals, both military and civilian,
drawn from Central and State Government
staff to respond immediately by flying in a
matter of hours an experienced response
team to the locations when a disaster
strikes. This team can be organized and
run professionally on the same lines as
the United Nations Disaster Assessment
and Coordination (UNDAC) teams.
d) Creation of urban search and rescue
capacity at all levels, by establishing a fully
equipped Search and Rescue unit, as part
of the fire service in all State capitals, with
trained staff and modern equipment such
as thermal imagers, acoustic detection
devices etc. This is of immediate rele-
vance since a major weakness exposed
in the Gujarat earthquake was a lack of
specialised urban search and rescue
capability in India.
e) Media policy geared to handling the grow-
ing phenomenon of real time television
reporting, which generates enormous
political pressures on a government to
respond rapidly and efficiently. This needs
attention since the effect is going to
increase, not decrease in future.
f) Closer interface with and better under-
standing of the international system for
disaster response, and putting in place,
systems for dealing with international
assistance once it comes in e.g., customs,
immigration, foreign policy implications
etc. A greater appreciation is needed of
the speed and automation of modern inter-
national response to a natural disaster.
Closer interaction is required between of
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
197
the Ministry of External Affairs and the
relevant inter-national agencies concerned
with disaster response.
g) Standard procedures for dealing with
domestic humanitarian and relief assis-
tance from non-government sources.
Procedures and systems need to be set
out to avoid confusion and ensure best
utilisation of the assistance being offered,
just as in the case of systems for
international assistance.
h) Modern unified legislation for disaster
management. In view of the current
division of responsibilities between the
State and Central Government into state,
central and concurrent lists, there is a need
to create a body of legislation dealing with
response to natural disasters and other
emergencies, clearly delineating responsi-
bilities and powers of each entity and
specifying what powers or actions would
need to be triggered on declaration of a
disaster by the Government of India or a
State Government. This legislation should
also incorporate the current legislation
dealing with chemical emergencies that
has been created by the Ministry of
Environment so that all emergencies are
dealt with under one law. The legislation
should include clear definitions of what
constitutes a disaster at a national level.
FINANCIAL ARRANGEMENTS
Financing of Relief Expenditures
7.29 The policy arrangements for meeting
relief expenditure related to natural disasters are,
by and large, based on the recommendations of
successive finance commissions. The two main
wi ndows presentl y open for meeti ng such
expenditures are the Calamity Relief Fund (CRF)
and National Calamity Contingency Fund (NCCF).
The Calamity Relief Fund is used for meeting the
expenditure for providing immediate relief to the
victims of cyclone, drought, earthquake, fire, flood
and hailstorm. Expenditure on restoration of
damaged capital works should ordinarily be met
from the normal budgetary heads, except when
it is to be incurred as part of providing immediate
relief, such as restoration of drinking water
sources or provi si on of shel ters etc., or
restoration of communication links for facilitating
rel i ef operati ons. The amount of annual
contribution to the CRF of each State for each of
the financial years 2000-01 to 2004-05 is as
indicated by the Finance Commission. Of the total
contribution indicated, the Government of India
contributes 75 per cent of the total yearly allocation
in the form of a non-plan grant, and the balance
amount is contributed by the State Government
concerned. A total of Rs. 11,007.59 crore was
provi-ded for the Calamity Relief Fund from
2000-05.
7.30 Pursuant to the recommendations of the
Eleventh Finance Commission, apart from the
CRF, a National Calamity Contingency Fund
(NCCF) Scheme came into force with effect from
the financial year 2000-01 and would be operative
till the end of the financial year 2004-05. NCCF
is intended to cover natural calamities like
cyclone, drought, earthquake, fire, flood and
hailstorm, which are considered to be of severe
nature requi ri ng expendi ture by the State
Government in excess of the balances available
in its own Calamity Relief Fund. The assistance
from NCCF is available only for immediate relief
and rehabilitation. Any recons-truction of assets
or restoration of damaged capital should be
financed through re-allocation of Plan funds.
There is need for defining the arrangements in
this regard.
7.31 The initial corpus of the National Fund
is Rs.500 crore, provided by the Government of
India. This fund is required to be recouped by
levy of special surcharge for a limited period on
central taxes. An amount of about Rs.2,300 crore
has already been released to States from NCCF.
A list of items and norms of expenditure for
assistance chargeable to CRF/NCCF in the wake
of natural calamities is prescribed in detail from
time to time.
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
198
Financing of Disaster Management Through
Five Year Plans
7.32 Although not specifically addressed in Five
Year Plan documents in the past, the Government
of India has a long history of using funds from the
Plan for mitigating natural disasters. Funds are
provided under Plan schemes i.e., various schemes
of Government of India, such as for drinking water,
employment generation, inputs for agriculture and
flood control measures etc. There are also facilities
for rescheduling short-term loans taken for agricul-
ture purposes upon certification by the District/State
administration. Central Government’s assets/
infrastructure are to be repaired/rectified by the
respective Ministry/Department of Government of
India. Besides this, at the occurrence of a calamity
of great magnitude, funds flow from donors, both
local and international, for relief and rehabilitation,
and in few cases for long-term preparedness/
preventive measures. Funds for the latter purposes
are also available from multilateral funding agencies
such as the World Bank. These form part of the
State Plan.
7.33 There are also a number of important
ongoing schemes that specifically help reduce
disaster vulnerability. Some of these are: Integrated
Wasteland Development Programme (IWDP),
Drought Prone Area Programme (DPAP), Desert
Development Programme (DDP), Flood Control
Programmes, National Afforestation & Eco-
development Programme (NA&ED), Accelerated
Rural Water Supply Programme (ARWSP), Crop
Insurance, Sampurn Grameen Rozgar Yojana
(SGRY), Food for Work etc.
Initiatives Proposed by Various Bodies
Regarding Financing Under the Plan
7.34 References have recently been made to
the role of the Plan in disaster management by the
High Power Committee (HPC) on Disaster Mana-
gement, as well as by the Eleventh Finance
Commission. The HPC was constituted in 1999
and submitted its Report in October 2001. The HPC
took an overview of all recent disasters (natural as
well as manmade) in the country and identified
common response and preparedness mechanisms
on the basis of a series of consultations with a num-
ber of government, non-government, national and
international agencies and media organisations. An
important recommendation of the Committee was
that at least 10 per cent of plan funds at the national,
state and district levels be earmarked and
apportioned for schemes which specifically address
areas such as prevention, reduction, preparedness
and mitigation of disasters.
7.35 The Eleventh Finance Commission too
paid detailed attention to the issue of disaster mana-
gement and, in its chapter on calamity relief, came
out with a number of recommendations, of which
the following have a direct bearing on the Plan:
(a) Expenditure on restoration of infrastruc-
ture and other capital assets, except those
that are intrinsically connected with relief
operations and connectivity with the
affected area and population, should be
met from the plan funds on priority basis.
(b) Medium and long-term measures be
devised by the concerned Ministries of the
Government of India, the State Govern-
ments and the Planning Commission to
reduce, and if possible, eliminate, the
occurrences of these calamities by
undertaking developmental works.
(c) The Planning Commission, in consultation
with the State Governments and concer-
ned Ministries, should be able to identify
works of a capital nature to prevent the
recurrence of specific calamities. These
works may be funded under the Plan.
PLANNING FOR SAFE NATIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
7.36 Development programmes that go into
promoting development at the local level have been
left to the general exercise of planning. Measures
need also to be taken to integrate disaster mitigation
efforts at the local level with the general exercise of
planning, and a more supportive environment
created for initiatives towards managing of disasters
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
199
at all levels: national, state, district and local. The
future blue-print for disaster management in India
rests on the premise that in today’s society while
hazards, both natural or otherwise, are inevitable,
the disasters that follow need not be so and the
society can be prepared to cope with them
effectively whenever they occur. The need of the
hour is to chalk out a multi-pronged strategy for
total risk management, comprising prevention,
preparedness, response and recovery on the one
hand, and initiate development efforts aimed
towards risk reduction and mitigation, on the other.
Only then can we look forward to “sustainable
development.”
Disaster Prevention And Preparedness
Measures
Information and Research Network
7.37 Disaster prevention is intrinsically linked
to preventive planning. Some of the important steps
in this regard are:
(a) Introduction of a comprehensive process
of vulnerability analysis and objective risk
assessment.
(b) Building a robust and sound information
database: A comprehensive database of
the land use, demography, infrastructure
developed at the national, state and local
levels along with current information on
climate, weather and man-made struc-
tures is crucial in planning, warning and
assessment of disasters. In addition,
resource inventories of governmental and
non-governmental systems including
personnel and equipment help in efficient
mobilisation and optimisation of response
measures.
(c) Creating state-of-the-art infrastructure:
The entire disaster mitigation game plan
must necessarily be anchored to frontline
research and development in a holistic
mode. State-of-the art technologies avail-
able worldwide need to be made available
in India for upgradation of the disaster
management system; at the same time,
dedicated research activities should be
encouraged, in all frontier areas related
to disasters like biological, space applica-
tions, information technology, nuclear
radiation etc., for a continuous flow of high
quality basic information for sound disaster
management planning,
(d) Establishing Linkages between all know-
ledge-based institutions: A National
Disaster Knowledge Network, tuned to the
felt needs of a multitude of users like
disaster managers, decision makers,
community etc., must be developed as the
network of networks to cover natural,
manmade and biological disasters in all
their varied dimensions,
Capacity Building, Training & Education
7.38 Personnel involved in the exercise have
to draw upon knowledge of best practices and
resources available to them. Information and train-
ing on ways to better respond to and mitigate
disasters to the responders go a long way in building
the capacity and resilience of the country to reduce
and prevent disasters. Training is an integral part
of capacity building as trained personnel respond
much better to different disasters and appreciate
the need for preventive measures. The directions
in this regard are:
(a) The multi-sectoral and multi-hazard
prevention based approach to disaster
management requires specific profes-
sional inputs. Professional training in
disaster management should be built into
the existing pedagogic research and edu-
cation. Specialised courses for disaster
management may be developed by
universities and professional teaching
institutions, and disaster management
should be treated as a distinct academic
and professional discipline, something that
the American education system has done
successfully. In addition to separate
diploma/degree courses in disaster mana-
gement, the subject needs to be discussed
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
200
and taught as a specific component in
professional and specialised courses like
medicine, nursing, engineering, environ-
mental sciences, architecture, and town
and country planning.
(b) The focus towards preventive disaster
management and development of a
national ethos of prevention calls for an
awareness generation at all levels. An
appropriate component of disaster aware-
ness at the school level will help increase
awareness among children and, in many
cases, parents and other family members
through these children. Curriculum deve-
lopment with a focus towards dissemi-
nation of disaster related information on
a sustained basis, covering junior, middle
and high schools may be worked out by
the different school boards in the country.
(c) Training facilities for government person-
nel involved in disaster management are
conducted at the national level by the
National Centre for Disaster Management
(NCDM) at the Indian Institute of Public
Administration, in New Delhi which func-
tions as the nodal institution in the country
for training, research and documentation
of disasters. At the State level, disaster
management cells operating within the
State Administrative Training Institutes
(ATIs) provide the necessary training.
Presently, 24 ATIs have dedicated facul-
ties. There is a need for strengthening
specialised training, including training of
personnel in disaster response.
(d) Capacity building should not be limited to
professionals and personnel involved in
disaster management but should also
focus on building the knowledge, attitude
and skills of a community to cope with the
effects of disasters. Identification and
training of volunteers from the community
towards first response measures as well
as mitigation measures is an urgent
imperative. A programme of periodic drills
should be introduced in vulnerable areas
to enable prompt and appropriate
community response in the event of a
disaster, which can help save valuable
lives.
7.39 Capacity building for effective disaster
management therefore needs to be grounded and
linked to the community and local level responders
on the one hand and also to the institutional
mechanism of the State and the Nation on the other.
Community Level Initiatives
7.40 The goal of any disaster management
initiative is to build a disaster resistant/resilient com-
munity equipped with safer living and sustainable
livelihoods to serve its own development purposes.
The community is also the first responder in any
disaster situation, thereby emphasising the need
for community level initiatives in managing
disasters. To encourage such initiatives, the follow-
ing are required:
(a) Creating awareness through disaster
education and training and information
dissemination are necessary steps for
empowering the community to cope with
disasters.
(b) Community based approach followed by
most NGOs and Community Based
Organisations (CBOs) should be
incorporated in the disaster management
system as an effective vehicle of com-
munity participation.
(c) Within a vulnerable community, there exist
groups that are more vulnerable like
women and children, aged and infirm and
physically challenged people who need
special care and attention especially
during disaster situations. Efforts are
required for identifying such vulnerable
groups and providing special assistance
in terms of evacuation, relief, aid and
medical attention to them in disaster
situations.
7.41 Management of disasters should therefore
be an interface between a community effort to
mitigate and prevent disasters as also an effort from
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
201
the government machinery to buttress and support
popular initiatives.
Strengthening of Plan Activities
7.42 Given the pervasive nature of disasters
and the widespread havoc caused by some of them,
planned expenditure on disaster mitigation and
prevention measures in addition to the CRF is
required. The Central Sector Scheme of Natural
Disaster Management Programmes has been
implemented since 1993-94 by the Department of
Agriculture and Co-operation with the objective to
focus on disaster preparedness with emphasis on
mitigation and preparedness measures for enhan-
ced capability to reduce the adverse impact of
disasters. The major activities undertaken within
this scheme include the setting up of the National
Centre for Disaster Management (NCDM) at the
Indian Institute of Public Administration, creation of
24 disaster management faculties in 23 states,
research and consultancy services, documentation
of major disaster events and forging regional
cooperation. The Eighth Plan allocation of Rs 6.30
crore for this scheme was increased to Rs. 16.32
crore in the Ninth Plan. Within this scheme, NCDM
has conducted over 50 training programmes,
training more than 1000 people, while 24 disaster
management centres with dedicated faculty have
been established in the states. Over 4000 people
have been trained at the State level. In addition,
some important publications and audio-visual
training modules have been prepared and
documentation of disaster events has been done.
7.43 Though limited in scope and outlays, the
Scheme has made an impact on the training and
research activities in the country. Creation of facul-
ties in disaster management in all 28 states is
proposed to be taken up in the Tenth Plan in addition
to community mobilisation, human resource
development, establishment of Control Rooms and
forging international cooperation in disaster
management. There is also an urgent need for
strengthening the disaster management pedagogy
by creating disaster management faculties in
universities, rural development institutes and other
organisations of premier research.
7.44 Sustainability is the key word in the
development process. Development activities that
do not consider the disaster loss perspective fail to
be sustainable. The compounded costs of
disasters relating to loss of life, loss of assets,
economic activities, and cost of reconstruction of
not only assets but of lives can scarcely be borne
by any community or nation. Therefore, all
development schemes in vulnerable areas should
include a disaster mitigation analysis, whereby the
feasibility of a project is assessed with respect to
vulnerability of the area and the mitigation measures
required for sustainability. Environmental protection,
afforestation programmes, pollution control,
construction of earthquake resistant structures etc.,
should therefore have high priority within the plans.
7.45 The aim of a mitigation strategy is to
reduce losses in the event of a future occurrence
of a hazard. Structural mitigation may comprise
construction of individual disaster resistant struc-
tures like retrofitted or earthquake-resistant
buildings or creation of structures whose function
is primarily disaster protection like flood control
structures, dykes, levees, infiltration dams etc.
7.46 Mitigation measures on individual struc-
tures can be achieved by design standards, building
codes and performance specifications. Building
codes, critical front-line defence for achieving
stronger engineered structures, need to be drawn
up in accordance with the vulnerability of the area
and implemented through appropriate techno-legal
measures.
7.47 Mitigation measures need to be consi-
dered in land use and site planning activities.
Constructions in hazardous areas like flood plains
or steep soft slopes are more vulnerable to
disasters. Necessary mitigation measures need to
be built into the design and costing of development
projects.
7.48 Insurance is a potentially important miti-
gation measure in disaster-prone areas as it brings
quality in the infrastructure & consciousness and a
culture of safety by its insistence on following
building codes, norms, guidelines, quality materials
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
202
in construction etc. Disaster insurance mostly
works under the premise of ‘higher the risk higher
the premium, lesser the risk lesser the premium’,
thus creating awareness towards vulnerable areas
and motivating people to settle in relatively safer
areas.
THE PATH AHEAD
7.49 For addressing natural calamities such as
floods and drought, there already exist a number of
plan schemes under which a lot is being done and
can be done. State Governments need to make full
use of the existing plan schemes and give priority
to implementation of such schemes that will help in
overcoming the conditions created by the calamity.
In some cases this implies possible diversion of the
funds from other schemes to those schemes the
implementation of which will help meeting the situa-
tion. There may also be need in a crisis situation
for certain re-appropriations/reallocations among
the different departments.
7.50 The Planning Commission will aim at
responding quickly to the needs of the Central
Ministries/Departments/States in matters relating to
the Plan for meeting situations arising out of natural
disasters, by enabling adjustment of schemes to
meet the requirements as far as possible. A mecha-
nism will be evolved to take expeditious decisions
on proposals which involve transfer of funds from
one scheme to another, or any other change which
involves departure from the existing schemes/
pattern of assistance, new schemes and relaxation
in procedures, etc. in the case of natural disasters.
7.51 As the first responder in any disaster
situation, however, each State needs to build a team
of dedicated trained, skilled personnel, make
provision for specialised equipments, efficient com-
munication network, and relevant, intelligent and
easily accessible database. There is also a need
to consider creation of a plan scheme in each state
basically to meet the minimum requirements for
strengthening communications and emergency
control rooms, thereby improving coordination and
response to disasters. No new institutional struc-
tures need be created in such a scheme.
7.52 In particular, with regard to major dis-
asters, it is also necessary for disaster mitigation
components to be built into all development projects.
In order to save larger outlays on reconstruction and
rehabilitation subsequently, a mechanism would
need to be worked out for allowing components that
specifically help projects coming up in highly
disaster prone areas withstand the impact of natural
disasters as part of approved project cost for
projects financed under the Plan.
7.53 The message for the Tenth Plan is that in
order to move towards safer national development,
development projects should be sensitive towards
disaster mitigation. With the kind of economic losses
and developmental setbacks that the country has
been suffering year after year, it makes good eco-
nomic sense to spend a little extra today in a planned
way on steps and components that can help in
prevention and mitigation of disasters, than be forced
to spend many multiples more later on resto-ration
and rehabilitation. The design of development
projects and the process of development should
take the aspect of disaster reduction and mitigation
within its ambit; otherwise, the development ceases
to be sustainable and eventually causes more
hardship and loss to the nation.
doc_139159931.pdf
Five Year Plan documents have, historically, not included consideration of issues relating to the management and mitigation of natural disasters. The traditional perception has been limited to the idea of "calamity relief", which is seen essentially as a non-plan item of expenditure.
189
7.1 Five Year Plan documents have, histori-
cally, not included consideration of issues relating
to the management and mitigation of natural
disasters. The traditional perception has been
limited to the idea of “calamity relief”, which is seen
essentially as a non-plan item of expenditure.
However, the impact of major disasters cannot be
mitigated by the provision of immediate relief alone,
which is the primary focus of calamity relief efforts.
Disasters can have devastating effects on the
economy; they cause huge human and economic
losses, and can significantly set back development
efforts of a region or a State. Two recent disasters,
the Orissa Cyclone and the Gujarat Earthquake,
are cases in point. With the kind of economic losses
and developmental setbacks that the country has
been suffering year after year, the development
process needs to be sensitive towards disaster
prevention and mitigation aspects. There is thus
need to look at disasters from a development
perspective as well.
7.2 Further, although disaster management is
not generally associated with plan financing, there
are in fact a number of plan schemes in operation,
such as for drought proofing, afforestation, drinking
water, etc., which deal with the prevention and
mitigation of the impact of natural disasters. Exter-
nal assistance for post-disaster reconstruction and
streamlining of management structures also is a
part of the Plan. A specific, centrally sponsored
scheme on disaster management also exists. The
Plan thus already has a defined role in dealing with
the subject.
7.3 Recently, expert bodies have dwelt on the
role of the Planning Commission and the use of
plan funds in the context of disaster management.
Suggestions have been made in this regard by the
Eleventh Finance Commission, and also the High
Powered Committee on Disaster Management. An
approach on planning for safe development needs
to be set out in the light of these suggestions.
7.4 This chapter reflects the considerations
outlined above. It briefly outlines the global context
and the Indian experience of disasters, sets out the
institutional and financial arrangements for disaster
management and the response towards these in
the country, looks at directions for improvement,
and concludes with a strategy to facilitate planning
for safe national development in the Tenth Plan
period.
THE GLOBAL CONTEXT
7.5 There has been an increase in the number
of natural disasters over the past years, and with it,
increasing losses on account of urbanisation and
population growth, as a result of which the impact
of natural disasters is now felt to a larger extent.
According to the United Nations, in 2001 alone,
natural disasters of medium to high range caused
at least 25,000 deaths around the world, more than
double the previous year, and economic losses of
around US $ 36 billion. These figures would be
much higher, if the consequences of the many
smaller and unrecorded disasters that cause
significant losses at the local community level were
to be taken into account. Devastations in the
aftermath of powerful earthquakes that struck
Gujarat, El Salvador and Peru; floods that ravaged
many countries in Africa, Asia and elsewhere;
droughts that plagued Central Asia including
Afghanistan, Africa and Central America; the
cyclone in Madagascar and Orissa; and floods in
Bolivia are global events in recent memory.
However, what is disturbing is the knowledge that
these trends of destruction and devastation are on
the rise instead of being kept in check.
CHAPTER – 7
DISASTER MANAGEMENT:
THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
190
7.6 Natural disasters are not bound by political
boundaries and have no social or economic consi-
derations. They are borderless as they affect both
developing and developed countries. They are also
merciless, and as such the vulnerable tend to suffer
more at the impact of natural disasters. For
example, the developing countries are much more
seriously affected in terms of the loss of lives,
hardship borne by population and the percentage
of their GNP lost. Since 1991, two-third of the victims
of natural disasters were from developing countries,
while just 2 per cent were from highly developed
nations. Those living in developing countries and
especially those with limited resources tend to be
more adversely affected. With the alarming rise in
the natural disasters and vulnera-bility per se, the
world community is strengthening its efforts to cope
with it.
7.7 As a number of the most vulnerable
regions are in India, natural disaster management
has emerged as a high priority for the country.
Going beyond the historical focus on relief and
rehabilitation after the event, we now have to look
ahead and plan for disaster preparedness and
mitigation, in order that the periodic shocks to our
development efforts are minimized.
THE INDIAN EXPERIENCE
Regional Vulnerabilities
7.8 Physical vulnerability relates to the
physical location of people, their proximity to the
hazard zone and standards of safety maintained to
counter the effects. For instance, some people are
vulnerable to flood only because they live in a flood
prone area. Physical vulnerability also relates to
the technical capacity of buildings and structures
to resist the forces acting upon them during a hazard
event.
7.9 The extent to which a population is affec-
ted by a calamity does not purely lie in the physical
components of vulnerability, but is contextual also
to the prevailing social and economic conditions and
it’s consequential effect on human activities within
a given society. Research in areas affected by
earthquakes indicates that single parent families,
women, handicapped people, children and the aged
are particularly vulnerable social groups. The geo-
physical setting with unplanned and inadequate
developmental activity is a cause for increased
losses during disasters. In the case of India, the
contribution of over-population to high population
density, which in turn results in escalating losses,
deserves to be noted. This factor sometimes tends
to be as important as physical vulnerability attributed
to geography and infrastructure alone.
7.10 The continent of Asia is particularly vulner-
able to disaster strikes. Between the years 1991 to
2000 Asia has accounted for 83 per cent of the
population affected by disasters globally. While the
number of people affected in the rest of the world
were 1,11,159, in Asia the number was 5,54,439.
1
Within Asia, 24 per cent of deaths due to disasters
occur in India, on account of its size, population and
vulnerability. Floods and high winds account for 60
per cent of all disasters in India. While substantial
progress has been made in other sectors of human
development, there is need to do more towards
mitigating the effect of disasters.
7.11 Many parts of the Indian sub-continent are
susceptible to different types of disasters owing to
the unique topographic and climatic characteristics.
About 54 per cent of the sub-continent’s landmass
is vulnerable to earthquakes while about 4 crore
hectares is vulnerable to periodic floods. The
Box 7.1
INDIA’S KEY VULNERABILITIES
Coastal States, particularly in the East Coast and
Gujarat are vulnerable to cyclones.
4 crore hectare land mass is vulnerable to floods.
68 per cent of net sown area is vulnerable to
drought.
55 per cent of total area is in Seismic Zones III - V,
and vulnerable to earthquakes.
Sub-Himalayan/Western Ghat is vulnerable to
landslides.
1. World Disasters Report, IFRC, 2001
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
191
decade 1990-2000, has been one of very high
disaster losses within the country, losses in the
Orissa Cyclone in 1999, and later, the Gujarat
Earthquake in 2001 alone amount to several thou-
sand crore of Rupees, while the total expenditure
on relief and reconstruction in Gujarat alone has
been to the tune of Rs 11,500 crore.
2
7.12 Similarly, the country has suffered four
major earthquakes in the span of last fifty years
along with a series of moderate intensity
earthquakes that have occurred at regular intervals.
Since 1988, six earthquakes have struck different
parts of the country. These caused considerable
human and property losses.
7.14 Disasters may also reduce availability of
new investment, further constricting the growth of
the region. Besides, additional pressures may be
imposed on finances of the government through
investments in relief and rehabilitation work.
7.15 In the recent earthquake in Gujarat, more
than 14,000 lives were lost, ten lakh houses were
damaged and the asset loss has been indicated to
be worth 15,000 crore. Tables 7.2 to 7.5 give an
indication of the magnitude of the damage and
losses incurred by the country in recent natural
disasters.
7.16 The dimensions of the damage, as evident
in the tables and the diagram 7.1 emphasise the
point that natural disasters cause major setbacks
to development and it is the poorest and the weakest
that are the most vulnerable to disasters. Given the
high frequency with which one or the other part of
the country suffers due to disasters, mitigating the
impact of disasters must be an integral component
of our development planning and be part of our
poverty reduction strategy.
INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS
7.17 The country with its federal system of
Government has specific roles for the Central and
State Governments. However, the subject of
disaster management does not specifically find
Economic Losses Due to Disasters
7.13 Disasters lead to enormous economic
losses that are both immediate as well as long term
in nature and demand additional revenues. Also,
as an immediate fall-out, disasters reduce revenues
from the affected region due to lower levels of
economic activity leading to loss of direct and
indirect taxes. In addition, unplanned budgetary
allocation to disaster recovery can hamper
development interventions and lead to unmet
developmental targets.
2. As on 11-12-2000, Gujarat Earthquake : A Case Study, NCDM,
2002, New Delhi
Box 7.2
Global Losses Through Natural Disasters
According to Reinsurance Company ‘Munich
Re’ costs associated with natural disasters has
gone up 14 fold since the 1950s. Each year from
1991 to 2000, an average of 211 million people
were killed or affected by natural disasters - seven
times greater than the figure for those killed or
affected by conflict. Towards the end of the 1990s,
the world counted some 25 million ‘environmental
refugees’- for the first time more people had fled
natural hazards than conflict.
Source: World Disasters Report, 2001
Table 7.1
Major Earthquakes in India, 1988-2001
Date Location Magnitude
August 21,1988 Bihar-Nepal Border 6.4
October 20,1991 Uttarkashi, Uttar Pradesh 6.6
September 30, 1993 Latur- Osmanabad, 6.3
Maharashtra
May 22, 1997 Jabalpur, Madhya Pradesh 6.0
March 29, 1999 Chamoli, Uttar Pradesh 6.9
January 26,2001 Bhuj, Gujarat 7.7
Source : Indian Meteorological Department and US Geological Survey
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
192
Table 7.2
Damage due to Natural Disasters in India
Year People affected Houses & buildings, partially or Amount of property
(Lakh) totally, damaged damage/loss
(Rs Crore)
1985 595.6 2,449,878 40.06
1986 550.0 2,049,277 30.74
1987 483.4 2,919,380 20.57
1988 101.5 242,533 40.63
1989 30.1 782,340 20.41
1990 31.7 1,019,930 10.71
1991 342.7 1,190,109 10.90
1992 190.9 570,969 20.05
1993 262.4 1,529,916 50.80
1994 235.3 1,051,223 10.83
1995 543.5 2,088,355 40.73
1996 549.9 2,376,693 50.43
1997 443.8 1,103,549 n.a.
1998 521.7 1,563,405 0.72
1999 501.7 3,104,064 1020.97
2000 594.34 2,736,355 800.00
2001 788.19 846,878 12000
Source : Annual Reports, NDM Division, Ministry of Agriculture
Table 7.3
Annual Damage due to Heavy Rains, Landslide and Floods
S. Year Districts Villages Population Crop Area Houses Human Cattle Estimated Estimated of
No affected affected affected affected Damaged life loss loss value of value of Public
(No) (Lakh) (Lakh Ha.) (no.) (no.) (no.) loss to houses properties
(Rs. in crore) (Rs. in crore)
1 1999 202 33,158 328.12 8.45 884,823 1,375 3,861 0.72 -
2 2000 200 29,964 416.24 34.79 2,736,355 3,048 102,121 631.25 389.72
3 2001 122 32,363 210.71 18.72 346,878 834 21,269 195.57 676.05
Source : Annual Reports, Natural Disaster Management Division, Ministry of Agriculture
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
193
Table 7.4
Damage due to Cyclone in Orissa in October ’2000
Date of Total no Districts Villages Population Crop Area Houses Human Cattle
occurrence of districts affected affected affected affected Damaged life loss loss
(No) (Lakh) (Lakh Ha) (no.) (no.) (no.)
17-18.10.99 30 4 5,181 37.47 1.58 331,580 199 10,578
29-30.10.99 30 12 14,643 129.22 18.43 1,828,532 9,887 444,531
Source : Annual Reports, Natural Disaster Management Division, Ministry of Agriculture
Table 7.5
Losses due to Droughts: 1999-2001
S.No Year Districts Villages Population Damage to Estimated Cattle
affected affected affected crops area value of population
(No) (Lakh) (Lakh Ha) damaged crops affected
(Rs crore) (in lakh)
1 1999 125 - 369.88 134.22 6.44 345.60
2 2000 110 54,883 378.14 367.00 371.87 541.67
3 2001 103 22,255 88.19 67.44 NA 34.28
TOTAL 338 77,138 836.21 568.66 378.31 921.55
Source: Annual Reports, Natural Disaster Management Division, Ministry of Agriculture
Source: Central Water Commission.
Figure 7.1
Cumulative Annualised
Flood Damage (Rs. in crore)
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
194
mention in any of the three lists in the 7th Schedule
of the Indian Constitution, where subjects under the
Central and State Governments as also subjects
that come under both are specified. On the legal
front, there is no enactment either of the Central or
of any State Government to deal with the
management of disasters of various types in a
comprehensive manner.
7.18 The country has an integrated adminis-
trative machinery for management of disasters at
the National, State, District and Sub-District levels.
The basic responsibility of undertaking rescue, relief
and rehabilitation measures in the event of natural
disasters, as at present, is that of the State Govern-
ments concerned. The Central Government supple-
ments the efforts of the States by providing financial
and logistic support.
Central Level
7.19 The dimensions of response at the level
of the Central Government are determined in
accordance with the existing policy of financing relief
expenditure and keeping in view the factors like:
(i) the gravity of a natural disaster;
(ii) the scale of the relief operation necessary;
and
(iii) the requirements of Central assistance for
augmenting financial resources and
logistic support at the disposal of the State
Government.
7.20 The Contingency Action Plan (CAP) identi-
fies initiatives required to be taken by various
Central Ministries and Public Departments in the
wake of natural calamities. It sets down the
procedures and determines the focal points in the
administrative machinery to facilitate launching of
relief and rescue operations without delay.
7.21 The Ministry of Home Affairs is the nodal
Ministry for coordination of relief and response and
overall natural disaster management, and the
Department of Agriculture & Cooperation is the
nodal Ministry for drought management. Other
Ministries are assigned the responsibility of provi-
ding emergency support in case of disasters that
fall in their purview as indicated in Table 7.6.
The following decision-making and standing bodies
are responsible for disaster management at the
Central level:
•
Union Cabinet, headed by the Prime Minister.
•
Empowered Group of Ministers, headed by the
Deputy Prime Minister
•
National Crisis Management Committee
(NCMC), under the chairmanship of the
Cabinet Secretary.
•
Crisis Management Group (CMG): under the
chairmanship of the Central Relief
Commissioner comprising senior officers from
the various Ministries and other concerned
Departments which reviews contingency
plans, measures required for dealing with a
natural disaster, and co-ordinates the activities
of the Central Ministries and the State
Governments in relation to disaster
preparedness response and relief.
•
Technical Organizations, such as the Indian
Meteorological Department (cyclone/earth-
quake), Central Water Commission (floods),
Table 7.6
Ministries Responsible for Various
Categories of Disasters
Disaster Nodal Ministry
Natural Disasters Ministry of Home Affairs
Management
(other than Drought)
Drought Relief Ministry of Agriculture
Air Accidents Ministry of Civil Aviation
Railway Accidents Ministry of Railways
Chemical Disasters Ministry of Environment &
Forests
Biological Disasters Ministry of Health
Nuclear Disasters Department of Atomic
Energy
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
195
Building and Material Promotion Council (cons-
truction laws), Bureau of Indian Standards
(norms), Defence Research & Development
Organization (nuclear/biological), Directorate
General Civil Defence provide specific
technical support to coordination of disaster
response and management functions.
•
The setting up of a National Disaster Manage-
ment Authority (NDMA) is being contemplated
by the Ministry of Home Affairs as the proposed
apex structure within the government for the
purpose. Amongst other major organisational
initiatives, it is proposed to:
(a) establish a specialised and earmarked
response team for dealing with nuclear/
biological/chemical disasters;
(b) establish search and rescue teams in each
State;
(c) strengthen communication systems in the
North Eastern Region.
State Government
7.22 The responsibility to cope with natural
disasters is essentially that of the State Govern-
ment. The role of the Central Government is
supportive in terms of supplementation of physical
and financial resources. The Chief Secretary of
the State heads a state level committee which is in
overall charge of the relief operations in the State
and the Relief Commissioners who are in charge
of the relief and rehabilitation measures in the wake
of natural disasters in their States function under
the overall direction and control of the state level
committee. In many states, Secretary, Department
of Revenue, is also in-charge of relief. State
Governments usually have relief manuals and the
districts have their contingency plan that is updated
from time to time.
District and Local Level
7.23 The district administration is the focal point
for implementation of all governmental plans and
activities. The actual day-to-day function of adminis-
tering relief is the responsibility of the Collector/
District Magistrate/Deputy Commissioner who
exercises coordinating and supervising powers over
all departments at the district level. Though it may
not be a common phenomenon, there exists by and
large in districts also a district level relief committee
consisting of officials and non- officials.
7.24 The 73rd and 74th constitutional amend-
ments recognise Panchayati Raj Institutions as
‘Institutions of self- government’. The amendment
has also laid down necessary guidelines for the
structure of their composition, powers, functions,
devolution of finances, regular holding of elections
and reservation of seats for weaker sections
including women. These local bodies can be
effective instruments in tackling disasters through
early warning system, relief distribution, providing
shelter to the victims, medical assistance etc.
7.25 Other than the national, state, district and
local levels, there are various institutional stake-
holders who are involved in disaster management
at various levels in the country. These include the
police and para-military forces, civil defence and
home-guards, fire services, ex-servicemen, non-
government organisations (NGOs), public and
private sector enterprises, media and HAM
operators, all of whom have important roles to play.
Armed Forces
7.26 The Indian Armed Forces are supposed
to be called upon to intervene and take on specific
tasks only when the situation is beyond the capability
of civil administration. In practice, the Armed Forces
are the core of the government’s response capacity
and tend to be the first responders of the Govern-
ment of India in a major disaster. Due to their ability
to organize action in adverse ground circumstances,
speed of operational response and the resources
and capabilities at their disposal, the Armed Forces
have historically played a major role in emergency
support functions such as communications, search
and rescue operations, health and medical facilities,
transportation, power, food and civil supplies, public
works and engineering, especially in the immediate
aftermath of disaster. Disaster management plans
should incorporate the role expected of them so
that the procedure for deploying them is smooth
and quick.
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
196
External Linkages
7.27 The Government of India is a member of
various international organisations in the field of
disaster response and relief. While, as a policy, no
requests for assistance or appeals are made to the
international community in the event of a disaster,
assistance offered suo moto is accepted. Linkages
exist with the following organisations:
a) UN Office for Coordination of Humani-
tarian Affairs (UN OCHA), which has been
made responsible by UN General
Assembly mandate for all international
disaster response.
b) United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP), responsible for mitigation and
prevention aspects of disaster mana-
gement.
c) UN Disaster Assessment and Coordi-
nation (UNDAC) System.
Streamlining Institutional Arrangements for
Disaster Response
7.28 Institutional arrangements for disaster
response are the heart of disaster management
systems. There is no dearth of personnel, both
civilian and military, experienced in handling
situations arising out of natural disasters. However,
there certainly is a pressing need for improvement
and strengthening of existing institutional arrange-
ments and systems in this regard to make the initial
response to a disaster more effective and profes-
sional. Most of the resources and expertise needed
already exist with the Government. What needs to
be streamlined is how they should be integrated,
trained and deployed. Some of the areas where
improvement is urgently needed are:
a) Integrated planning for disasters, including
the integration of relevant Armed Forces
formations into disaster management
planning at all levels from District to State
and Central Government.
b) Setting up of a modern, permanent
national command centre or operations
room, with redundant communications
and data links to all State capitals. The
national command centre or operations
room needs to be manned on a 24-hour
basis by professionals to cater for instant
integrated response. There needs to be
a properly equipped operations room at
the State level as well.
c) Establishment of a national stand by, quick
reaction team composed of experienced
professionals, both military and civilian,
drawn from Central and State Government
staff to respond immediately by flying in a
matter of hours an experienced response
team to the locations when a disaster
strikes. This team can be organized and
run professionally on the same lines as
the United Nations Disaster Assessment
and Coordination (UNDAC) teams.
d) Creation of urban search and rescue
capacity at all levels, by establishing a fully
equipped Search and Rescue unit, as part
of the fire service in all State capitals, with
trained staff and modern equipment such
as thermal imagers, acoustic detection
devices etc. This is of immediate rele-
vance since a major weakness exposed
in the Gujarat earthquake was a lack of
specialised urban search and rescue
capability in India.
e) Media policy geared to handling the grow-
ing phenomenon of real time television
reporting, which generates enormous
political pressures on a government to
respond rapidly and efficiently. This needs
attention since the effect is going to
increase, not decrease in future.
f) Closer interface with and better under-
standing of the international system for
disaster response, and putting in place,
systems for dealing with international
assistance once it comes in e.g., customs,
immigration, foreign policy implications
etc. A greater appreciation is needed of
the speed and automation of modern inter-
national response to a natural disaster.
Closer interaction is required between of
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
197
the Ministry of External Affairs and the
relevant inter-national agencies concerned
with disaster response.
g) Standard procedures for dealing with
domestic humanitarian and relief assis-
tance from non-government sources.
Procedures and systems need to be set
out to avoid confusion and ensure best
utilisation of the assistance being offered,
just as in the case of systems for
international assistance.
h) Modern unified legislation for disaster
management. In view of the current
division of responsibilities between the
State and Central Government into state,
central and concurrent lists, there is a need
to create a body of legislation dealing with
response to natural disasters and other
emergencies, clearly delineating responsi-
bilities and powers of each entity and
specifying what powers or actions would
need to be triggered on declaration of a
disaster by the Government of India or a
State Government. This legislation should
also incorporate the current legislation
dealing with chemical emergencies that
has been created by the Ministry of
Environment so that all emergencies are
dealt with under one law. The legislation
should include clear definitions of what
constitutes a disaster at a national level.
FINANCIAL ARRANGEMENTS
Financing of Relief Expenditures
7.29 The policy arrangements for meeting
relief expenditure related to natural disasters are,
by and large, based on the recommendations of
successive finance commissions. The two main
wi ndows presentl y open for meeti ng such
expenditures are the Calamity Relief Fund (CRF)
and National Calamity Contingency Fund (NCCF).
The Calamity Relief Fund is used for meeting the
expenditure for providing immediate relief to the
victims of cyclone, drought, earthquake, fire, flood
and hailstorm. Expenditure on restoration of
damaged capital works should ordinarily be met
from the normal budgetary heads, except when
it is to be incurred as part of providing immediate
relief, such as restoration of drinking water
sources or provi si on of shel ters etc., or
restoration of communication links for facilitating
rel i ef operati ons. The amount of annual
contribution to the CRF of each State for each of
the financial years 2000-01 to 2004-05 is as
indicated by the Finance Commission. Of the total
contribution indicated, the Government of India
contributes 75 per cent of the total yearly allocation
in the form of a non-plan grant, and the balance
amount is contributed by the State Government
concerned. A total of Rs. 11,007.59 crore was
provi-ded for the Calamity Relief Fund from
2000-05.
7.30 Pursuant to the recommendations of the
Eleventh Finance Commission, apart from the
CRF, a National Calamity Contingency Fund
(NCCF) Scheme came into force with effect from
the financial year 2000-01 and would be operative
till the end of the financial year 2004-05. NCCF
is intended to cover natural calamities like
cyclone, drought, earthquake, fire, flood and
hailstorm, which are considered to be of severe
nature requi ri ng expendi ture by the State
Government in excess of the balances available
in its own Calamity Relief Fund. The assistance
from NCCF is available only for immediate relief
and rehabilitation. Any recons-truction of assets
or restoration of damaged capital should be
financed through re-allocation of Plan funds.
There is need for defining the arrangements in
this regard.
7.31 The initial corpus of the National Fund
is Rs.500 crore, provided by the Government of
India. This fund is required to be recouped by
levy of special surcharge for a limited period on
central taxes. An amount of about Rs.2,300 crore
has already been released to States from NCCF.
A list of items and norms of expenditure for
assistance chargeable to CRF/NCCF in the wake
of natural calamities is prescribed in detail from
time to time.
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
198
Financing of Disaster Management Through
Five Year Plans
7.32 Although not specifically addressed in Five
Year Plan documents in the past, the Government
of India has a long history of using funds from the
Plan for mitigating natural disasters. Funds are
provided under Plan schemes i.e., various schemes
of Government of India, such as for drinking water,
employment generation, inputs for agriculture and
flood control measures etc. There are also facilities
for rescheduling short-term loans taken for agricul-
ture purposes upon certification by the District/State
administration. Central Government’s assets/
infrastructure are to be repaired/rectified by the
respective Ministry/Department of Government of
India. Besides this, at the occurrence of a calamity
of great magnitude, funds flow from donors, both
local and international, for relief and rehabilitation,
and in few cases for long-term preparedness/
preventive measures. Funds for the latter purposes
are also available from multilateral funding agencies
such as the World Bank. These form part of the
State Plan.
7.33 There are also a number of important
ongoing schemes that specifically help reduce
disaster vulnerability. Some of these are: Integrated
Wasteland Development Programme (IWDP),
Drought Prone Area Programme (DPAP), Desert
Development Programme (DDP), Flood Control
Programmes, National Afforestation & Eco-
development Programme (NA&ED), Accelerated
Rural Water Supply Programme (ARWSP), Crop
Insurance, Sampurn Grameen Rozgar Yojana
(SGRY), Food for Work etc.
Initiatives Proposed by Various Bodies
Regarding Financing Under the Plan
7.34 References have recently been made to
the role of the Plan in disaster management by the
High Power Committee (HPC) on Disaster Mana-
gement, as well as by the Eleventh Finance
Commission. The HPC was constituted in 1999
and submitted its Report in October 2001. The HPC
took an overview of all recent disasters (natural as
well as manmade) in the country and identified
common response and preparedness mechanisms
on the basis of a series of consultations with a num-
ber of government, non-government, national and
international agencies and media organisations. An
important recommendation of the Committee was
that at least 10 per cent of plan funds at the national,
state and district levels be earmarked and
apportioned for schemes which specifically address
areas such as prevention, reduction, preparedness
and mitigation of disasters.
7.35 The Eleventh Finance Commission too
paid detailed attention to the issue of disaster mana-
gement and, in its chapter on calamity relief, came
out with a number of recommendations, of which
the following have a direct bearing on the Plan:
(a) Expenditure on restoration of infrastruc-
ture and other capital assets, except those
that are intrinsically connected with relief
operations and connectivity with the
affected area and population, should be
met from the plan funds on priority basis.
(b) Medium and long-term measures be
devised by the concerned Ministries of the
Government of India, the State Govern-
ments and the Planning Commission to
reduce, and if possible, eliminate, the
occurrences of these calamities by
undertaking developmental works.
(c) The Planning Commission, in consultation
with the State Governments and concer-
ned Ministries, should be able to identify
works of a capital nature to prevent the
recurrence of specific calamities. These
works may be funded under the Plan.
PLANNING FOR SAFE NATIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
7.36 Development programmes that go into
promoting development at the local level have been
left to the general exercise of planning. Measures
need also to be taken to integrate disaster mitigation
efforts at the local level with the general exercise of
planning, and a more supportive environment
created for initiatives towards managing of disasters
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
199
at all levels: national, state, district and local. The
future blue-print for disaster management in India
rests on the premise that in today’s society while
hazards, both natural or otherwise, are inevitable,
the disasters that follow need not be so and the
society can be prepared to cope with them
effectively whenever they occur. The need of the
hour is to chalk out a multi-pronged strategy for
total risk management, comprising prevention,
preparedness, response and recovery on the one
hand, and initiate development efforts aimed
towards risk reduction and mitigation, on the other.
Only then can we look forward to “sustainable
development.”
Disaster Prevention And Preparedness
Measures
Information and Research Network
7.37 Disaster prevention is intrinsically linked
to preventive planning. Some of the important steps
in this regard are:
(a) Introduction of a comprehensive process
of vulnerability analysis and objective risk
assessment.
(b) Building a robust and sound information
database: A comprehensive database of
the land use, demography, infrastructure
developed at the national, state and local
levels along with current information on
climate, weather and man-made struc-
tures is crucial in planning, warning and
assessment of disasters. In addition,
resource inventories of governmental and
non-governmental systems including
personnel and equipment help in efficient
mobilisation and optimisation of response
measures.
(c) Creating state-of-the-art infrastructure:
The entire disaster mitigation game plan
must necessarily be anchored to frontline
research and development in a holistic
mode. State-of-the art technologies avail-
able worldwide need to be made available
in India for upgradation of the disaster
management system; at the same time,
dedicated research activities should be
encouraged, in all frontier areas related
to disasters like biological, space applica-
tions, information technology, nuclear
radiation etc., for a continuous flow of high
quality basic information for sound disaster
management planning,
(d) Establishing Linkages between all know-
ledge-based institutions: A National
Disaster Knowledge Network, tuned to the
felt needs of a multitude of users like
disaster managers, decision makers,
community etc., must be developed as the
network of networks to cover natural,
manmade and biological disasters in all
their varied dimensions,
Capacity Building, Training & Education
7.38 Personnel involved in the exercise have
to draw upon knowledge of best practices and
resources available to them. Information and train-
ing on ways to better respond to and mitigate
disasters to the responders go a long way in building
the capacity and resilience of the country to reduce
and prevent disasters. Training is an integral part
of capacity building as trained personnel respond
much better to different disasters and appreciate
the need for preventive measures. The directions
in this regard are:
(a) The multi-sectoral and multi-hazard
prevention based approach to disaster
management requires specific profes-
sional inputs. Professional training in
disaster management should be built into
the existing pedagogic research and edu-
cation. Specialised courses for disaster
management may be developed by
universities and professional teaching
institutions, and disaster management
should be treated as a distinct academic
and professional discipline, something that
the American education system has done
successfully. In addition to separate
diploma/degree courses in disaster mana-
gement, the subject needs to be discussed
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
200
and taught as a specific component in
professional and specialised courses like
medicine, nursing, engineering, environ-
mental sciences, architecture, and town
and country planning.
(b) The focus towards preventive disaster
management and development of a
national ethos of prevention calls for an
awareness generation at all levels. An
appropriate component of disaster aware-
ness at the school level will help increase
awareness among children and, in many
cases, parents and other family members
through these children. Curriculum deve-
lopment with a focus towards dissemi-
nation of disaster related information on
a sustained basis, covering junior, middle
and high schools may be worked out by
the different school boards in the country.
(c) Training facilities for government person-
nel involved in disaster management are
conducted at the national level by the
National Centre for Disaster Management
(NCDM) at the Indian Institute of Public
Administration, in New Delhi which func-
tions as the nodal institution in the country
for training, research and documentation
of disasters. At the State level, disaster
management cells operating within the
State Administrative Training Institutes
(ATIs) provide the necessary training.
Presently, 24 ATIs have dedicated facul-
ties. There is a need for strengthening
specialised training, including training of
personnel in disaster response.
(d) Capacity building should not be limited to
professionals and personnel involved in
disaster management but should also
focus on building the knowledge, attitude
and skills of a community to cope with the
effects of disasters. Identification and
training of volunteers from the community
towards first response measures as well
as mitigation measures is an urgent
imperative. A programme of periodic drills
should be introduced in vulnerable areas
to enable prompt and appropriate
community response in the event of a
disaster, which can help save valuable
lives.
7.39 Capacity building for effective disaster
management therefore needs to be grounded and
linked to the community and local level responders
on the one hand and also to the institutional
mechanism of the State and the Nation on the other.
Community Level Initiatives
7.40 The goal of any disaster management
initiative is to build a disaster resistant/resilient com-
munity equipped with safer living and sustainable
livelihoods to serve its own development purposes.
The community is also the first responder in any
disaster situation, thereby emphasising the need
for community level initiatives in managing
disasters. To encourage such initiatives, the follow-
ing are required:
(a) Creating awareness through disaster
education and training and information
dissemination are necessary steps for
empowering the community to cope with
disasters.
(b) Community based approach followed by
most NGOs and Community Based
Organisations (CBOs) should be
incorporated in the disaster management
system as an effective vehicle of com-
munity participation.
(c) Within a vulnerable community, there exist
groups that are more vulnerable like
women and children, aged and infirm and
physically challenged people who need
special care and attention especially
during disaster situations. Efforts are
required for identifying such vulnerable
groups and providing special assistance
in terms of evacuation, relief, aid and
medical attention to them in disaster
situations.
7.41 Management of disasters should therefore
be an interface between a community effort to
mitigate and prevent disasters as also an effort from
DISASTER MANAGEMENT : THE DEVELOPMENT PERSPECTIVE
201
the government machinery to buttress and support
popular initiatives.
Strengthening of Plan Activities
7.42 Given the pervasive nature of disasters
and the widespread havoc caused by some of them,
planned expenditure on disaster mitigation and
prevention measures in addition to the CRF is
required. The Central Sector Scheme of Natural
Disaster Management Programmes has been
implemented since 1993-94 by the Department of
Agriculture and Co-operation with the objective to
focus on disaster preparedness with emphasis on
mitigation and preparedness measures for enhan-
ced capability to reduce the adverse impact of
disasters. The major activities undertaken within
this scheme include the setting up of the National
Centre for Disaster Management (NCDM) at the
Indian Institute of Public Administration, creation of
24 disaster management faculties in 23 states,
research and consultancy services, documentation
of major disaster events and forging regional
cooperation. The Eighth Plan allocation of Rs 6.30
crore for this scheme was increased to Rs. 16.32
crore in the Ninth Plan. Within this scheme, NCDM
has conducted over 50 training programmes,
training more than 1000 people, while 24 disaster
management centres with dedicated faculty have
been established in the states. Over 4000 people
have been trained at the State level. In addition,
some important publications and audio-visual
training modules have been prepared and
documentation of disaster events has been done.
7.43 Though limited in scope and outlays, the
Scheme has made an impact on the training and
research activities in the country. Creation of facul-
ties in disaster management in all 28 states is
proposed to be taken up in the Tenth Plan in addition
to community mobilisation, human resource
development, establishment of Control Rooms and
forging international cooperation in disaster
management. There is also an urgent need for
strengthening the disaster management pedagogy
by creating disaster management faculties in
universities, rural development institutes and other
organisations of premier research.
7.44 Sustainability is the key word in the
development process. Development activities that
do not consider the disaster loss perspective fail to
be sustainable. The compounded costs of
disasters relating to loss of life, loss of assets,
economic activities, and cost of reconstruction of
not only assets but of lives can scarcely be borne
by any community or nation. Therefore, all
development schemes in vulnerable areas should
include a disaster mitigation analysis, whereby the
feasibility of a project is assessed with respect to
vulnerability of the area and the mitigation measures
required for sustainability. Environmental protection,
afforestation programmes, pollution control,
construction of earthquake resistant structures etc.,
should therefore have high priority within the plans.
7.45 The aim of a mitigation strategy is to
reduce losses in the event of a future occurrence
of a hazard. Structural mitigation may comprise
construction of individual disaster resistant struc-
tures like retrofitted or earthquake-resistant
buildings or creation of structures whose function
is primarily disaster protection like flood control
structures, dykes, levees, infiltration dams etc.
7.46 Mitigation measures on individual struc-
tures can be achieved by design standards, building
codes and performance specifications. Building
codes, critical front-line defence for achieving
stronger engineered structures, need to be drawn
up in accordance with the vulnerability of the area
and implemented through appropriate techno-legal
measures.
7.47 Mitigation measures need to be consi-
dered in land use and site planning activities.
Constructions in hazardous areas like flood plains
or steep soft slopes are more vulnerable to
disasters. Necessary mitigation measures need to
be built into the design and costing of development
projects.
7.48 Insurance is a potentially important miti-
gation measure in disaster-prone areas as it brings
quality in the infrastructure & consciousness and a
culture of safety by its insistence on following
building codes, norms, guidelines, quality materials
TENTH FIVE YEAR PLAN : 2002-07
202
in construction etc. Disaster insurance mostly
works under the premise of ‘higher the risk higher
the premium, lesser the risk lesser the premium’,
thus creating awareness towards vulnerable areas
and motivating people to settle in relatively safer
areas.
THE PATH AHEAD
7.49 For addressing natural calamities such as
floods and drought, there already exist a number of
plan schemes under which a lot is being done and
can be done. State Governments need to make full
use of the existing plan schemes and give priority
to implementation of such schemes that will help in
overcoming the conditions created by the calamity.
In some cases this implies possible diversion of the
funds from other schemes to those schemes the
implementation of which will help meeting the situa-
tion. There may also be need in a crisis situation
for certain re-appropriations/reallocations among
the different departments.
7.50 The Planning Commission will aim at
responding quickly to the needs of the Central
Ministries/Departments/States in matters relating to
the Plan for meeting situations arising out of natural
disasters, by enabling adjustment of schemes to
meet the requirements as far as possible. A mecha-
nism will be evolved to take expeditious decisions
on proposals which involve transfer of funds from
one scheme to another, or any other change which
involves departure from the existing schemes/
pattern of assistance, new schemes and relaxation
in procedures, etc. in the case of natural disasters.
7.51 As the first responder in any disaster
situation, however, each State needs to build a team
of dedicated trained, skilled personnel, make
provision for specialised equipments, efficient com-
munication network, and relevant, intelligent and
easily accessible database. There is also a need
to consider creation of a plan scheme in each state
basically to meet the minimum requirements for
strengthening communications and emergency
control rooms, thereby improving coordination and
response to disasters. No new institutional struc-
tures need be created in such a scheme.
7.52 In particular, with regard to major dis-
asters, it is also necessary for disaster mitigation
components to be built into all development projects.
In order to save larger outlays on reconstruction and
rehabilitation subsequently, a mechanism would
need to be worked out for allowing components that
specifically help projects coming up in highly
disaster prone areas withstand the impact of natural
disasters as part of approved project cost for
projects financed under the Plan.
7.53 The message for the Tenth Plan is that in
order to move towards safer national development,
development projects should be sensitive towards
disaster mitigation. With the kind of economic losses
and developmental setbacks that the country has
been suffering year after year, it makes good eco-
nomic sense to spend a little extra today in a planned
way on steps and components that can help in
prevention and mitigation of disasters, than be forced
to spend many multiples more later on resto-ration
and rehabilitation. The design of development
projects and the process of development should
take the aspect of disaster reduction and mitigation
within its ambit; otherwise, the development ceases
to be sustainable and eventually causes more
hardship and loss to the nation.
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