Week 1 Disaster Risk On Air
Week 1 Disaster Risk On Air
Week 1 Disaster Risk On Air
READINESS AND
RISK
REDUCTION
hazardous materials
accidents,
raw material extraction
(mining) accidents,
and structural (building)
fires and failures.
Impact of hazards common in our environment
1.Loos of life, injury, disruption, and human activity.
2.Disruption of essential services.
3.Damage of property, damage to infrastructure.
4.Damage to crops and trees.
5.Loose of livelihood, economic loss of the community.
6.Psycho-social traumatic effects.
7.Alteration of geological settings.
SUMMARY:
HAZARD - A dangerous phenomenon, substance, human
activity or condition that may cause loss of life, injury or other
health impacts, property damage, loss of livelihoods and
services, social and economic disruption, or environmental
damage.
DISASTER - A serious disruption of the functioning of a
community or a society involving widespread human, material,
economic or environmental losses and impacts, which exceeds
the ability of the affected community or society to cope using its
own resources.
TWO MAIN CATEGORIES OF HAZARDS:
Natural Hazards - Natural hazards are those resulting
from an adverse interaction between a natural process
and human society or its man-made environment.
Man Made and Technological Hazards - Technological
or 'man-made' hazards are an inevitable potentiality of
technological innovation, and can occur after the failure
of an existing technology. These tend to be less
understood than natural hazards due to the scope of
technological expansion.
EVALUATION: