Difference between revisions of "Disasters"

From AdCiv
Jump to: navigation, search
 
Line 1: Line 1:
 
Earthquakes, hurricanes, drought, landslides, tsunamis, famine, disease {{em}} these things are a part of life on Earth. But with the intelligent application of technology, some can be eliminated, some can be rendered harmless and others can be dealt with as best we can.
 
Earthquakes, hurricanes, drought, landslides, tsunamis, famine, disease {{em}} these things are a part of life on Earth. But with the intelligent application of technology, some can be eliminated, some can be rendered harmless and others can be dealt with as best we can.
  
According to emergency-response expert Vinay Gupta, there are six ways to die during an emergency situation: too hot, too cold, thirst, hunger, disease and injury. If [[Fundamental resources/Food|food production]], [[Fundamental resources/Water|water treatment]] and [[Fundamental resources/Energy|power generation]] are all decentralized, people are no longer dependent on roads and infrastructure to keep them alive and so a disaster destroying local infrastructure won't cut them off from food, water or energy. This reduces the impact of a disaster from a humanitarian crisis to an annoyance.   
+
According to emergency-response expert Vinay Gupta, there are six ways to die during an emergency situation: too hot, too cold, thirst, hunger, disease and injury. If [[Fundamental resources/Food|food production]], [[Fundamental resources/Water|water treatment]] and [[Fundamental resources/Energy|power generation]] are all decentralized, people are no longer dependent on roads and infrastructure to keep them alive. This reduces the impact of a disaster from a humanitarian crisis to an annoyance.   
  
It is frequently said that earthquakes don't kill people, buildings do. That is to say, deaths from earthquakes are the result of flimsy buildings collapsing and crushing people. This is why hundreds of thousands of people die when an earthquake strikes rural China or Haiti, but few die when an earthquake of similar magnitude strikes Los Angeles. Better building methods, particularly in earthquake-prone areas, can reduce the numbers who die in earthquakes to nearly zero.
+
It is frequently said that earthquakes don't kill people, buildings do. That is to say, deaths from earthquakes are the result of flimsy buildings collapsing and crushing people. This is why hundreds of thousands of people die when an earthquake strikes rural China or Haiti, but few die when an earthquake of similar magnitude strikes Los Angeles. Better building methods, particularly in earthquake-prone areas, can reduce the numbers who die in earthquakes to nearly zero. The same is true for hurricanes
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==
  
 
* [[Existing scarcity]]
 
* [[Existing scarcity]]
 +
* [[Survival of our species]]
 +
* [[Pandemic preparedness]]

Latest revision as of 18:30, 18 July 2010

Earthquakes, hurricanes, drought, landslides, tsunamis, famine, disease — these things are a part of life on Earth. But with the intelligent application of technology, some can be eliminated, some can be rendered harmless and others can be dealt with as best we can.

According to emergency-response expert Vinay Gupta, there are six ways to die during an emergency situation: too hot, too cold, thirst, hunger, disease and injury. If food production, water treatment and power generation are all decentralized, people are no longer dependent on roads and infrastructure to keep them alive. This reduces the impact of a disaster from a humanitarian crisis to an annoyance.

It is frequently said that earthquakes don't kill people, buildings do. That is to say, deaths from earthquakes are the result of flimsy buildings collapsing and crushing people. This is why hundreds of thousands of people die when an earthquake strikes rural China or Haiti, but few die when an earthquake of similar magnitude strikes Los Angeles. Better building methods, particularly in earthquake-prone areas, can reduce the numbers who die in earthquakes to nearly zero. The same is true for hurricanes

See also