Apply: Averted Disaster Award 2023

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Women in Rwanda growing coffee to support themselves.
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Apply for the 2023 Averted Disaster Award

Nominations open November 28, 2022.

Applications are due January 15, 2023. 

We are proud to present the documentary “Rivers of Hope”, a short film about the 2022 Averted Disaster Award winner, the Bangladesh Red Crescent Society, and their efforts in Forecast-based Financing. The ADA documentary is produced in conjunction with the Waterbear Network and Resilient Foundation. Read the press release here.

Congratulations on the 2022 Averted Disaster Award honorees!

Winner

Bangladesh Red Crescent Society for Anticipatory Action and Forecast-based Financing in Bangladesh.
Press release.

Intervention of Distinction/Runner-up

Build Change for Resilient Housing in the Philippines.
Press release

Honourable Mention

Project NOAH for Early Warning Systems in the Philippines

Read the press release on the winners here.

Making invisible successes visible

The Averted Disaster Award is the premier recognition of successful disaster mitigation interventions that go unnoticed precisely because of their success. While the news often highlights catastrophes, they don’t focus on the buildings that stayed standing due to earthquake-resistant building codes, the wildfires avoided due to effective forest management, or the early-warning systems that saved lives in a typhoon. In the world of Disaster Risk Management (DRM), success means ‘nothing happens’ and as a result can cause policy makers and society at large to undervalue the importance of proactive intervention. The Averted Disaster Award sheds light on successes in DRM and ‘what might have been’ to recognize the outstanding work of those who invest in measures that keep our communities and world safe.

To stay up to date on all that is happening with the Averted Disaster Award, check out our NEWS updates, and please stay updated by entering your email below.

About ADA

The ADA Prize is built upon the work by Prof. David Lallemant, Maricar Rabonza, Dr. Yolanda Lin and members of the Disaster Analytics for Society Lab at NTU in Singapore that highlights how successful DRM interventions are rendered invisible as a result of their success, and the corresponding challenges that arise when incentivizing interventions that reduce risk. They further propose the use of counterfactual risk analysis as a means to make ‘avoided disasters’ visible, by shedding light on what could have been had a risk reduction intervention not been implemented. The work will be featured as a contributing paper in the upcoming UNDRR Global Assessment Report 2022. A preprint of the paper can be accessed with this link.

Why do successful DRM interventions tend to be invisible?

The Averted Disaster Award aims to recognise successful disaster mitigation interventions around the world that often go unnoticed by the very nature of their success.

Why do successful DRM interventions tend to be invisible?

In their work, Lallemant, Rabonza et al. (2022) highlight four situations that tend to make successful disaster risk management interventions invisible. This include:

  • Success made invisible in the midst of broader disaster: Successful mitigation may result in fewer losses after a disaster, but this success is obscured amid the catastrophe and losses that were still incurred.
  • Success made invisible by nature of the success: A hazard becomes a disaster on account of the impacts it has on society. If mitigation efforts are so successful that there are no perceivable impacts, both the potential disaster and the successful mitigation are made invisible.
  • Success made invisible due to yet unrealised benefits: On account of the large time delay between the mitigation intervention and its benefits being realised, mitigation efforts could be seen as unsuccessful or unnecessary until a hazard event occurs.
  • Success made invisible by the randomness of the specific outcome: hazards always have some level of randomness, hence any single occurrence is only one of several possibilities that could have occurred. Successes can be made invisible if the hazard randomly does not strain mitigation measures. A good example would be a ‘near-miss’, which does not test the mitigation measure.

How do we shed light on these successful, yet invisible, interventions?

We believe that the value of a risk reduction intervention should not be judged on the basis of specific outcomes alone, but on the basis of a broader exploration of potential outcomes. We encourage the applicants to exercise “counterfactual thinking” — the consideration of “what if…” scenarios. Some examples:

  • What if the school earthquake retrofit program had not been implemented? How many schools could have collapsed, and how many more people affected?
  • What if the residents were not alerted and evacuated in time for the storm’s impact to the city?
  • What if we discontinued regular preparedness exercises for the next 20 years? How would the discontinual affect the community’s disaster risk?

By imagining such scenarios, and making sure that assumptions are evidence-based and rooted in reality, we can make convincing arguments about the benefits of particular interventions.

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