Towards thresholds of disaster management performance under demographic change: exploring functional relationships using agent-based modeling
Authored by Birgit Mueller, Gunnar Dressler, Karin Frank, Christian Kuhlicke
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.5194/nhess-16-2287-2016
Sponsors:
European Union
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Flow charts
Pseudocode
Model Code URLs:
Model code not found
Abstract
Effective disaster management is a core feature for the protection of
communities against natural disasters such as floods. Disaster
management organizations (DMOs) are expected to contribute to ensuring
this protection. However, what happens when their resources to cope with
a flood are at stake or the intensity and frequency of the event exceeds
their capacities? Many cities in the Free State of Saxony, Germany, were
strongly hit by several floods in the last years and are additionally
challenged by demographic change, with an ageing society and
out-migration leading to population shrinkage in many parts of Saxony.
Disaster management, which is mostly volunteer-based in Germany, is
particularly affected by this change, leading to a loss of members. We
propose an agent-based simulation model that acts as a ``virtual lab{''}
to explore the impact of various changes on disaster management
performance. Using different scenarios we examine the impact of changes
in personal resources of DMOs, their access to operation relevant
information, flood characteristics as well as differences between
geographic regions. A loss of DMOs and associated manpower caused by
demographic change has the most profound impact on the performance.
Especially in rural, upstream regions population decline in combination
with very short lead times can put disaster management performance at
risk.
Tags
resilience
systems
scale
exposure
information
Protocol
Europe
Losses
Recovery
Formula