Landslide and disaster preparedness in Japan

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The landslide that occurred in Atami, Japan, on a Saturday morning, 3rd July 2021, affected 300 homes, killed two people and left 20 others missing. Hundreds of rescuers began looking for survivors.

Atami City has experienced more rainfall in the first few days of July than it usually does for the whole month, the BBC reports.

Governor Heita Kawakatsu tells reporters that “because of the heavy rain, the ground loosened, and the mudslide occurred…it picked up speed and swept away houses together with people” (At least two, 2021).

As more rains are forecasted in the next few days and with the additional warnings for further flooding in low-lying areas and sediment-related disasters, the residents of Shizuoka and other neighbouring prefectures of Kanagawa and Chiba were told to evacuate.

According to the BBC article, climate change makes these extreme weather events happen more frequently and become more destructive. Increasing rainfall events due to climate change will also raise the risk of devastating mudslides.

But Japan is no stranger to landslides and flooding owing to its mountainous terrain. Its dense population – 75% of its assets are in flood-prone areas also contributes to the risk. 

Heavy floods and landslides killed at least 50 people in the Kyushu region of southwestern Japan about the same time last year. And in 2018, torrential rains that caused mudslides and floods have killed more than 114 people.

According to a CNN report, a 2020 Japanese government report shows that Japan is averaging 1500 landslides every year in the past ten years, almost a 50% rise compared to the previous ten years. 

Japan’s Disaster Preparedness and Response

Aside from flooding and landslides, Japan is also frequently affected by earthquakes and tsunamis due to its location along the circum-Pacific volcanic belt.

Marc Forni, The World Bank’s Lead Disaster Risk Management Specialist, says, “Without question, Japan is the best in this area of expertise. Learning from Japan’s effective and contextualized Disaster Management System is important for all countries to see how theory is put into practice” (Sharing Japanese Expertise, 2017).

To know Japan’s disaster management measures, including preparedness and response and disaster risk reduction strategies, click this link: Guide to disaster management measures in Japan

We have also featured Japan’s climate adaptation good practices by its private sector in one of our blog posts.

What causes mudslides, and can it be prevented?

Slides are caused by water, gravity, and generally a layer of clay that lets loose. Landslides usually happen when the ground is saturated by heavy rains (Holdeman, 2016).

The article, “How to reduce the risk of a landslide” explains:

  • Rising water tables and increasing water pressures can contribute to slope failures causing landslips. The majority of landslides occur during or shortly after significant rainstorms.
  • When water penetrates the soil, it saturates the ground and reduces friction between the top later of soils and harder layers of bedrock beneath.
  • The top layer of soil then slides downwards, creating a landslide.
  • Slopes with no vegetation cover are especially prone to erosion.
  • The simplest and natural solution to prevent landslips is to plant vegetation as plants can slow down raindrops as they fall, and its roots can hold the soil together.

There are also engineering solutions to control erosions such as changing the slope geometry, reinforcing slope materials with chemical solutions, using piles and retaining walls, and grouting rocks joints and fissures to improve surface strength and reducing permeability, diverting debris pathways, rerouting surface, and underwater drainage. But these methods can be constrained by cost, magnitude and frequency of landslide, and the size of the population at risk (Meng, n.d.).

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Hazards Landslide
Country and region Japan

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