Facing Japan’s Extreme Weather Challenges

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

Society

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.

How to Change Community Mind-sets 

Let me return to my experiences in Kamaishi before the Great East Japan Earthquake. Within the city limits alone, there are 34 tsunami memorial stones. The tsunami that struck the Sanriku coast in 1896 killed 4,000 of Kamaishi’s 6,500 residents and almost completely destroyed the town. Before March 2011, when I asked children there if they knew Kamaishi was repeatedly devastated by tsunamis in the past, they said they did. But when I asked them where they would flee to avoid a tsunami, they said they wouldn’t go anywhere. Why not? Because “there’s a great big breakwater protecting the city.”

Tsunami-prone Kamaishi had long been a major center of steelmaking, a core industry for Japan, and the national government undertook to protect the city by building a huge breakwater at the entrance of the bay there, rising 10 meters above the sea from a depth of 63 meters. Upon its completion in 2009, it was recognized in Guinness World Records as the world’s deepest breakwater. 

The sight of this tremendous seawall made the adults of Kamaishi complacent about tsunamis. And the city’s children said they did not flee when tsunami warnings were issued, “because Grandpa and Dad don’t.” But given the cyclical nature of tsunamis, I felt certain that a huge one would strike Kamaishi during my pupils’ lifetimes. Since their failure to flee was the fault of the adults around them, I urged adults to set a proper example. And above all, I wanted to instill the power to survive in the children themselves. That is why I devoted myself to disaster-preparedness education.

The author works with pupils at the Tōni Elementary School in Kamaishi to draw up a disaster-preparedness map in 2006. Together they walked around to determine safe places to flee from an approaching tsunami on their way to or from school and marked the evacuation spots on their map. This sort of activity is an important element of disaster-preparedness education.

My idea was to include instruction about disaster preparedness as part of children’s normal educational environment. After keeping this up for 10 years, the pupils who had received this education would start joining the ranks of the city’s adults, and in another 10 years they would become disaster-conscious parents, who would pass on their awareness to the next generation. With this sort of teaching included as part of compulsory education for one decade after another, pupils will eventually grow up into adults forming the “cultural cornerstone” of a city where, even if tsunamis cannot be entirely shut out, they do not take people’s lives.

Building National Resilience at the Popular Level

I certainly do not mean to deny the government’s role in disaster prevention and mitigation. For example, if high breakwaters are in place, they can prevent tsunamis that are less high from reaching the shore. Government organs should do what they can to raise the minimum base of social welfare in terms of providing physical safety.

The Diet has been deliberating the topic of “national resilience.” When I was called to speak at a public hearing of the House of Representatives Budget Committee on this subject, I declared: “When you raise the level of levees and dikes like this, the increased physical safety makes the human factor weaker. In simple terms, people become more dependent. You end up falling into the same sort of pattern as that of children growing up weak because their parents are overprotective. So to the extent that the levees and dikes are high, you need to have people to match.” In other words, moves to raise national resilience in terms of physical infrastructure must be accompanied by the raising of resilience at the popular level.

The Japanese people experienced the 3/11 earthquake and tsunami disaster in 2011, and extreme weather events have recently been drawing their attention. These events must be made to serve as a wake-up call for them. I do not deny the need for disaster-prevention hardware. Physical structures have an important role to play in preventing and mitigating disasters. But we need to make people aware of the complacency they have fallen into as a result of such infrastructure and turn our society into one where people confront the danger of natural disasters themselves.

next: The Critical Danger of Widespread Flooding in Tokyo

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

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