GOVT.FLOODSOLUTIONS Flashcards
Why was the Task Force on Flood Insurance and Relocation established?
to explore solutions for high-risk areas and potential relocation strategies
Identify 5 priority areas for action under EMS (Emergency Management Strategy)
- Enhance whole-of-society collaboration
- Improve understanding of disaster risks
- Increase focus on whole-of-society prevention and mitigation
- Enhance disaster response capacity
- Strengthen recovery efforts by building back better to minimize the impacts of future disasters
Define the term “risk” in the context of disasters
disaster risk is the combination of the likelihood and the consequence of a specified hazard being realized
Identify and briefly describe the key drivers of Canada’s flood risk.
2 key drivers: UU - [HEAR]
Population growth and urban development:
- urban densification in flood-prone areas contributes to flood risk (70% of Canada’s population)
- urban centers are more prone to flood risks due to their location on or near floodplains and coastlines
Climate change: [HEAR]
- Heat-induced Risks - heat promotes wildfires and droughts, destroying vegetation and increasing runoff
- Extreme Precipitation - due to warmer temperatures
- Accelerated Warming - Canada’s climate is warming twice as fast as the global rate.
- Rising Sea Levels - coastal flooding
Identify 3 problems pertaining to flood insurance in Canada
- high cost (especially for low-income households): recent flood events cause increased premiums and possibly withdrawal of coverage altogether
- low risk awareness: information about floods, including flood maps, may be unavailable
- misaligned incentives: taxpayer-funded DFA programs contributes to a moral hazard because people may rely on that instead of buying insurance
Fully describe the implications of low risk awareness of flood risks in Canada
- people may not purchase flood insurance if they are not aware of the risk
- people may think their standard homeowner’s policy covers floods when it doesn’t
- people who do buy optional flood coverage may have insufficient protection
- people may be less likely to invest in property-level flood protection
Fully describe the moral hazards associated with misaligned incentives regarding flood risks in Canada
The moral hazards relate to the expectation that governments will provide post-disaster financial assistance regardless of poor decisions by individuals and communities on where to build.
- homeowners: At the homeowner level, DFA doesn’t encourage risk reduction or insurance purchase.
- communities: At the community level, local governments & developers, benefit from property sales and tax revenues, but flood recovery costs fall largely on other levels of government.
- regional & national: Cost-sharing of disaster recovery reduces incentivize for risk reduction (which may include expensive infrastructure)
Briefly describe the concept of FRM (Flood Risk Management)
- an alternative approach to conventional flood control measures
- promotes the use of non-structural mitigation measures to complement and enhance other types of mitigation
- stakeholders include: government, industry, communities, non-government organizations, individuals
- an iterative process of: acting, monitoring, reviewing, adapting
Role and Responsibility of Federal Government
Role: support provincial/local efforts to mitigate/manage flood emergencies
Responsibility: financial assistance
Roles of Provincial/Territorial Government
Roles:
- regulate insurers
- make infrastructure investments
Role and Responsibility of Municipal Government
Role: lead local response and recovery during emergencies
Responsibility: invest in structural and non-structural flood mitigation
Role and Responsibility of Indigenous communities (da)
Role: develop community emergency management plans
Responsibility: address unique challenges (geography, social/cultural) particularly in northern and remote communities
Role and Responsibility of Insurance Industry
Role: provide flood insurance
Responsibility: incentivize policyholders to engage in risk reduction
Role and Responsibility of Non-Governmental Organizations
Role: act as initial responders during flood incidents
Responsibility: coordinate volunteers in recovery efforts
Role and Responsibility of Communities & Individuals
Role: seek information to understand their property’s flood risk
Responsibility: purchase flood insurance
Identify the necessary preconditions for success of a private flood insurance market. [Hint: PAIL]
- Public awareness of flood risk
- Accurate & up-to-date flood mapping
- Investments in public and private flood defenses
- Limit post-disaster financial assistance from the government to encourage flood mitigation investments
Identify prevention and mitigation measures an individual household can implement (2)
- installing a backwater valve
- having a basement sump pump
Identify prevention and mitigation measures a community can implement
(Aui)
- adopt climate-resilient best practices for: regulations, land use, urban planning, development
- upgrade infrastructure
- invest in natural infrastructure
Identify prevention and mitigation measures that can be implemented on a national level (sii)
- stricter building codes
- improved flood risk information
- investments in climate resilience (Ex: infrastructure resilience, environmental resilience)
- funding for watershed level mitigation projects