1 / 30

Mapping the Vulnerability of Coastal Public

Mapping the Vulnerability of Coastal Public . Naleen Pussella. Faculty of Geomatics - Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka Post Graduate Institute of Science – University of Peradeniya. Outline. Introduction Problem Formulation Problem overview by the Government Objectives

koen
Télécharger la présentation

Mapping the Vulnerability of Coastal Public

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Mapping the Vulnerability of Coastal Public Naleen Pussella Faculty of Geomatics - Sabaragamuwa University of Sri Lanka Post Graduate Institute of Science – University of Peradeniya

  2. Outline • Introduction • Problem Formulation • Problem overview by the Government • Objectives • Site Selection • Methodology • Results and Conclusion • Future Study

  3. Introduction • Millions of people are faced to Natural Disasters such as Earthquakes, Land Slides, Flooding, Cyclones • Impact is getting more day by day due to several reasons such as, Public unawareness Environmental pollution Urbanization Improper use of natural resources

  4. Introduction • In the process of disaster management and mitigation, it is necessary to look the Environment • Identification of Vulnerability of the public in hazardous areas is a must • Natural Disasters in Sri Lanka Landslides, River flooding, Coastal erosion Droughts

  5. Problem Formulation • Coastal line of Sri Lanka – 1660 km • The Coast is the home to one third of population • Majority of the people derive their livelihood from the economic activities in this zone • It accounts for nearly 80 percent of fish production and 70 percent of industrial output of Sri Lanka • The coastal region includes terrestrial ecosystems, mangroves, lagoons and estuaries, shoreline ecosystem, coral reefs, etc

  6. Problem Formulation • Coastal erosion has been a severe problem over the years especially in the south, west and north-western coast in Sri Lanka • The average net mean rate of erosion for the entire country is varies from 0.2 to 0.35 m per year • At certain locations, the net erosion has been recorded up to 1 m per year

  7. Problem overview by the Government • 1978 - Coast Conservation Dept. • 1981 - Coast Conservation Act • Coastal Zone Management Plan, Coast Conservation Advisory Council to review the problems • Permits system within the 300m coastal zone for Development activities • No Build Coastal Buffer Zone 200m - North and East 100m - Elsewhere from the high water mark - 2005

  8. Objective • Identifying and Mapping the vulnerability of the coastal public within 100m buffer zone for natural hazards such as Tsunami, Coastal erosion etc..

  9. Site – Hambantota coastal area

  10. Site – Hambantota coastal area • Reasons: 1. Ranks as the third poorest district & poorest coastal district (32% are poor) 2. Population density is high in the region 3. More damages by the Tsunami waves 4. Less Strength of Natural Barriers such as Coral reefs, Mangroves, Coastal eco systems Etc. 5. Economically strength (Fishing, Agriculture, Trade and Tourism)

  11. Methodology • Mapping the features such as Coastal Topography, Presence of Natural and Man made Barriers, Presence of Infra structure facilities, Land use, Economical strengths of the zones, 100m Buffer zone map • Overlaying the above maps and assigning the weights depending on the Coastal Topography, Economical value of the area, Presence of barriers and the damages by the Tsunami waves using ILWIS 2.1 • Identification the high risk areas for future disasters

  12. Assigning Weights

  13. Assigning Weights

  14. Assigning Weights

  15. Assigning Weights

  16. Contour Map Contour Map

  17. Mapping the Economy Economical Strength

  18. Land Use Map Land Use

  19. Results and Conclusion • Identified the High, Medium and Low risk areas • The degree of vulnerability of the coastal public is very high due to low altitude, high population density, high coastal degradation and the impact of tsunami for their livelihood • Government and non governmental organizations should have a proper plan to uplift the living conditions of the coastal public

  20. Future Study – 3 Sites will be selected

  21. Future Study – 3 Sites will be selected

  22. Future Study – 3 Sites will be selected

  23. Final Expected output • A Coastal GIS • Identifying the Vulnerability of the Coastal Publicfor Future Disasters • Coastal Zones for Conservations, Residential & Commercial areas, Etc….

  24. Discussion

  25. Thank you

More Related