Facing Japan’s Extreme Weather Challenges

Addressing Natural Disaster Risks: The Need for Greater Self-Reliance

Society

Katada Toshitaka [Profile]

When the city of Kamaishi, Iwate Prefecture, was hit by a tremendous tsunami following the Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011, almost all of its 3,000 elementary and junior high school pupils survived. They were quick to flee thanks in part to the disaster-preparedness training by Katada Toshitaka, who here calls for greater self-reliance in the face of the growing risks from natural disasters.

The Problem of Excessive Reliance on the Government

Until the Ise Bay Typhoon (also known as Typhoon Vera) struck in 1959, Japan had been commonly losing thousands of people a year to natural disasters. And the 1959 super typhoon caused more than 5,000 deaths in the city of Nagoya. This was at a time when Japan was starting to achieve high-paced economic growth. It is not normal for an advanced country to experience thousands of fatalities due to natural disasters every year. Japan at that point evidently did not yet have the minimum infrastructure appropriate for an advanced country.

In 1961, two years after the Ise Bay Typhoon, the Disaster Countermeasures Basic Act went into effect, and after that the number of deaths fell sharply. In recent decades the figure has been below 100 every year except 1995 (the year of the Great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake) and 2011 (Great East Japan Earthquake).

For a country of around 100 million people to experience thousands of deaths a year due to natural disasters is a “system error,” and the government moved to correct this state of affairs. But when the number of annual fatalities among 100 million people is under 100, the deaths are in the realm of the accidental. If we consider the case of traffic-related fatalities, for example, even after crosswalks and pedestrian bridges are in place, people still die in accidents when they dash out onto roadways. In other words, avoiding accidents ultimately depends largely on individuals. But Japan’s disaster management efforts have relied mainly on the government to deal even with matters in the individual sphere.

For example, the authorities have been building levees with a view to 100-year probabilities. This means creating river embankments to withstand the flows from torrential rains that can be expected to occur only once or not at all over the course of a century. These levees prevent flooding from the lesser downpours that occur with greater frequency. Meanwhile, though, the know-how about working together to deal with disasters that had previously been passed down from generation to generation of local residents is lost, along with the awareness of disaster management as a community issue. And when a major disaster strikes people whose disaster preparedness has eroded, many lives are lost.

Today’s Japanese are overprotected by physical disaster management infrastructure like levees and dikes. The issue is how to escape the mind-set of relying on the government for safety measures. We need to get people back to taking charge of protecting their own lives.

next: How to Change Community Mind-sets 

Related Tags

Great East Japan Earthquake tsunami disaster global warming Kamaishi weather typhoon extreme weather Haiyan Hurricane Katrina FEMA

Katada ToshitakaView article list

Professor, School of Science and Technology, Gunma University. Specializes in disaster-related social engineering. In addition to researching disaster crisis management and related subjects, Katada is actively involved in local disaster management activities around the country, particularly tsunami-preparedness education in the city of Kamaishi. His works include Inochi o mamoru kyōiku: 3.11 Kamaishi kara no kyōkun (Education to Protect Lives: Lessons from 3/11 Kamaishi).

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