Risk Watch and Early Warning Platforms

Overview


Today, humanitarian action is moving from reactive to proactive. For the humanitarian actors, this means increasing focus on anticipatory, preventive and mitigative work that start before a disaster strikes. However, such activities take time, resources and cost money. Hence, we need the appropriate evidence to convince the donor community about the positive impact and value effectiveness of a anticipatory action.

Generating evidence will require data and analysis that takes into account the relevant local and international environmental, climate-related and socio-political factors. Aside of the potential disasters and associated hazards, we need to consider the vulnerability, resilience and coping capacity of the communities at risk.

Fortunately, to ease our work in analysis and evidence generation, we have a number platforms dedicated for risk watch, early warning and vulnerability monitoring.

Name

Description

Notes and added value

Name

Description

Notes and added value

UNDRR RiX - Risk Information Exchange

RiX brings together open-source global and national risk data, with an aim to harmonize the risk and vulnerability information, facilitating a smoother risk analysis and subsequent decision making process.

The risk and impact models are built on multiple datasets including global and local weather patterns, climate change effects, local hazards, exposure and vulnerabilities.

Data sources include:

By bringing together a high number of datasets and related analytical models, the RiX reduces the need to scramble data from multiple sources.

The current beta/pilot version covers selected countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America. More countries are going to be added later in 2022.

Full version to be launched in Nov 2022.

PDC DisasterAWARE/

PDC Disaster Alert

DisasterAlert is a free-to-use service by the PDC, featuring both automatized and manually entered disaster risk and early warning data around the world. The disaster-specific risk and vulnerability models are generated using multiple datasets from national and international actors.

The HazardBrief page provides a brief summary of the key figures including the exposure area, exposed population (with the sex and age disaggregated statistics where available), estimated assets damage and the overall risk and vulnerability score of each affected country.

 

Thanks to the global coverage, DisasterAlert is also suitable for regional and global-scale decision making.

IFRC Go: Emergencies

In the current version, the IFRC Go brings together data from two principal sources: Field reports from the National Red Crescent Societies and automated Orange and Red Alerts from GDACS.

Human-written field reports from the National Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies inform about new and potential emergencies, associated risks and related action. This complemensts the automatized and robot-captured observations from the other platforms.

The more sophisticated Go Risk Module will be published in 2022.