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Rapid Environmental Impact Assessment in Disaster Response


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Rapid environmental impact assessment in disaster response (REA)

The importance of the linkage between disasters and environmental damage is increasingly recognised as an important factor in mitigation and response, with several initiatives under way to reduce negative environmental impacts that contribute to disasters or arise from them.

However, environmental issues are still not systematically included in disaster response and recovery. Relief workers are rarely able to step back from their immediate and intense operational efforts to view the broader aspects of a disaster and its impacts. It is difficult for affected communities to communicate their concerns about the environment to relief assistance organisations working under pressure. Standard environmental impact assessment (EIA) methods are too complex to be readily applied in emergencies.

The Rapid Environmental Impact Assessment (REA) project seeks to overcome these problems by providing relief workers and affected communities with a simpler and more straightforward analytical and decision-making framework to identify significant environmental issues in relation to the prime humanitarian objectives of saving lives and reducing damage. The project is a joint initiative of the Benfield UCL Hazard Research Centre and CARE International, with funding to date from OFDA/USAID, UNEP/OCHA and the Royal Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

In its first phase (2001-4) a formal REA methodology was developed and tested in different locations and contexts. A training syllabus and course materials were also developed and tested; staff from a number of agencies received training. These and other project outputs were published (on this website) and advertised.

The second phase (2004-6) comprises support for real-time use of the REA by international, national and local organisations, a more extensive training programme to build capacity in operational and training organisations, and a range of awareness-raising activities.

Additional details on the REA project

REA Guidelines

The latest version of the Guidelines is 4.4, issued in May 2005. French and Spanish versions of the Guidelines are also available through this link.
Matara landfill

REA Training

REA Workshops are now scheduled for Pakistan (May 2006) and Tajikistan (June 2006). Other REA workshops in South Africa, East Africa, Asia and North America are in the process of being scheduled. Check the REA Worshop Schedule periodically for the latest workshop updates

Click here for the REA Workshop schedule.

Click here to see reports on past REA Workshops.

Click here to go to the REA Workshop materials.

REA group Channai

Real Time REA Assistance

The REA project has a capacity to provide REA experts to assist in conducting a rapid environmental impact assessment during major disasters.

The roster of currently available REA experts can be found here.

Real Time REA assistance is usually available in 5 to 7 days and experts can remain in the field up to a month.

REA Applications

Lebanon Desk Notes [pdf 27kb]
Field test report Pakistan >>more>>
Field report (Sri Lanka tsunami) (pdf 427 kb)
Indian Ocean Tsunami Disaster of December 2004 (Sri Lanka) (pdf 611kb)
Aceh, Indonesia (pdf 567kb)
Banda Aceh, Sumatra (pdf 2.93mb)
Tsunami Damage to Terrestrial Coastal Ecosystems: Common Guidelines and Methodology for Rapid Field Assessment (pdf 234kb)
More tsunami information from IUCN...


Virtual Conference on Disaster-Focused Environmental
Impact Assessment Tools

The REA project hosted a virtual conference on Disaster-Focused Environmental Impact Assessment Tools from 5 June to 11 August on
the Environment and Disasters listserv. The conference facilitated an exchange of information on different Disaster-Focused Environmental Impact Assessment tools between developers and practitioners.

Further information on the conference can be found by clicking here.

Resources

Best Practice Guidelines for the On Site Decommissioning of Pit Latrines/Septic Tanks within Transitional Shelter Sites. Project Galle 2005 for the Sanitation Task Force, National Water and Sanitation Coordination Group [pdf 305 kb].
Turkey
©IRINnews.org (http://irinnews.org/)

Also to be found at this link is Your Assessment of My Needs: Contrasting Crisis and Normal Impact Assessment, presented at the International Association of Impact Assessment annual meeting in 2004 which discusses how the REA and other disaster-related assessments are different from assessments conducted in normal times.

FRAME Project
Click here for beta documentation on the UNHCR Framework for Assessing,
Monitoring and Evaluating the Environment in Refugee-related Operations
(FRAME) Project, a joint UNHCR-CARE project.

Links to other environment and disaster resources.

For more information contact John Twigg at j.twigg@ucl.ac.uk or Charles Kelly at 727342412ck@compuserve.com

Benfield UCL Hazard Research Centre
Department of Earth Sciences
UCL
136 Gower Street (Lewis Building)
London, WC1E 6BT
UK

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Impact Assessment Tools
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