Photo: Ana P. Santos/IRIN. FIrst wreckage, now "no-build"
Source: IRIN
MANILA, 18 July 2014 (IRIN) - Mixed messages related to “No-Build Zones”
in coastal areas of the Philippines, including those devastated by
Typhoon Haiyan in November 2014 can create a false sense of security,
and prevent the rehabilitation of storm-displaced people, officials and
experts warn.
In the weeks after super typhoon Haiyan (local name Yolanda) decimated
the central Philippines, the Department of Environment and Natural
Resources (DENR) declared a “40-metre no-build zone” along the coastlines of Eastern Samar and Leyte, two of the worst-hit areas.
The declaration was based on protocols outlined in Article 51 of the Philippine Water Code, a presidential decree. However, officials say, the move could undermine safety and recovery efforts.
“There is a misinterpretation of the Water Code. It gives the wrong
message that when you are beyond 40 metres of the coastline, you are
already safe,” Alfred Romualdez, the mayor of Tacloban, told IRIN.
“Elevation is a better measure of protection. You cannot build a
structure that will withstand a storm surge or tsunami - the only way is
up,” he said.
Tacloban, a coastal city in the central Philippines, was swallowed up by
storm surges reported to be as high as six metres. Most of the over
6,000 deaths caused by Haiyan occurred in Tacloban.
A May 2014 inter-agency report
shows that around 26,000 people remain in tents and evacuation centres,
or with host families; and 200,000 people face prolonged displacement,
the report said, if the areas where they lived previously are declared
by the government as being in “no dwelling zones”. The designation means
structures can be built but not inhabited, which is often in practice
interpreted to mean “no-build zone”.
Government officials and humanitarian workers are concerned that
compliance with the 40-metre no-build zone can have the dual effect of
convincing people at lower elevations that they are safe when they are
not, and limiting relocation options by designating some safe areas as
off-limits.
“Non-strict” application
“We recommend that we do not strictly apply the no-build zone
[guideline]. It is impractical to implement,” said Karen Jimeno,
director of communications for the Office of the Presidential Advisor
for Rehabilitation and Recovery (OPARR).
OPARR was a committee created by President Benigno Simeon Aquino III to oversee all rehabilitation efforts after Haiyan.
Instead of the blanket 40-metre no-build zone, OPARR is recommending
that areas be classified as “safe zones,” “unsafe zones,” or “controlled
zones”.
Building in “controlled zones,” for example, will be permitted as long
as there are mitigating measures in that area such as mangroves, catch
basins, or sea walls to protect against disasters.
OPARR is currently surveying affected areas using “multi-hazard maps”
- which scope out the topography of an area and determine its degree of
vulnerability to certain disasters. Then the committee will classify
areas as safe, unsafe or controlled zones.
Previously the DENR-Mines and Geosciences Bureau produced geo-hazard maps that classified areas according to their degree of vulnerability to floods and landslides.
According to Jimeno, the multi-hazard maps will complement the
geo-hazard maps to include an area’s vulnerability to storm surge and
earthquake, in addition to floods and landslides.
“We hope that the LGUs [Local Government Units, which bear principal
responsibility for disaster response] can use the maps as an evaluation
tool to plan their resettlement and rebuilding efforts,” explained Sarah
Jane Samalburo, chief science research specialist at the Department of
Science and Technology (DOST), which is developing the maps in cooperation with the Japan International Cooperation Agency (JICA).
Taking too long
While many welcome the development of multi-hazard maps as part of “build back better” efforts, some are concerned that they are taking too long to complete, leaving the displaced in limbo.
According to Samalburo, of the 171 municipalities affected by Yolanda,
114 have been mapped out for landslide, 60 for flood and 20 for storm
surge. A multi-hazard map to determine earthquake vulnerability will be
developed at a later date.
“Our shelter interventions depend on these multi-hazards maps and the
decision of the local government on where to build. If you look at their
situation now, it is as if [the displaced] have not yet received
humanitarian aid,” said Conrad Navidad, emergency preparedness and
response coordinator for the International Organization for Migration
(IOM), in the Philippines.
The May inter-agency report
acknowledged that the government had adjusted its blanket policy on
no-build zones, but pointed out that only limited options for
resettlement remained.
Typhoon Ramussan (local name Glenda) made landfall in the Philippines this week, killing
at least 38 people. According to IOM, several hundred Haiyan-displaced
families were evacuated temporarily from tents to other structures when
flooding began.