Developing a Volcano Emergency Plan
Chapter Five
The Development of Volcanic Emergency Plans
Reproduced from: Volcanic Emergency Management, Office of
the United Nations Disaster Relief Coordinator (UNDRO) and United
Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural Organization, United
Nations, New York, 1985.
From the Foreword:
"It is not the purpose of this handbook to discuss the details
of the planning and organization needed to deal with volcanic
emergencies, since these will of necessity vary from country to
country according to political, social, legal and economic conditions
and to the level of technological development. What has been
attempted, is to distill from past experience in various parts of the
world some general principles of organization and practice which, it
is hoped, may prove to be of universal validity. The text has been
kept as concise as possible, with numerous references to actual
events."
"Against the more violent manifestations of volcanic activity,
the only possible protection is escape from the threatened areas. Mass
evacuation and other protective measures are more effective if they
are planned and organized before an emergency aries. The main elements
of pre- emergency planning are identified and discussed in chapter 5.
Mass evacuation entails, however, major disruption of normal life for
large numbers of people and is only undertaken when the risks of
staying in a threatened areas are judged to be unacceptable."
"Awareness of the need to prepare for events such as volcanic
eruptions and to provide protection against them, rather than simply
to await and endure them, has been growing steadily throughout the
world. It is hoped that this handbook will be of help to those
involved in pre- disaster planning."
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Basic elements of the plan
5.3 Time scales
5.4 Identification of hazard zones
5.5 Population census and inventory of property
5.6 Identification of safe transit points and
refuge zones
5.7 Identification of evacuation routes
5.8 Means of transport, traffic control
5.9 Accommodation in refuge zones
5.10 Rescue, first aid and hospital services
5.11 Security in evacuated zones
5.12 Alert procedures within government
5.13 Formulation and communication of public
warnings
5.14 Review and revision of plans
5.1 Introduction
It will be assumed in this chapter:
(a) That in any community exposed to volcanic hazards there is
general awareness of the hazard and of the attendant risks to life and
property, and a general desire to take collective action to reduce these
risks;
(b) That a legislative framework exists within which it is possible
to plan, organize, and put into effect, at the national and at the local
level, appropriate protective measures, including if necessary the
evacuation of threatened areas and assistance to evacuees;
(c) That scientific knowledge of the potentially dangerous volcanoes
is sufficiently advanced to permit the elaboration of
"scenarios" of possible eruptions, their destructive effects
and their social and economic consequences;
(d) That it will be possible to have some warning of impending
eruptions, either from visible signs of volcanic activity or from
scientific monitoring of the volcanoes, and that this warning will be
given in time for appropriate action to be taken;
(e) That, if the above conditions are fulfilled, an emergency plan of
action in case of eruption will be prepared for each potentially
dangerous volcano.
5.2 Basic elements of the plan
The emergency plan for each volcano normal contains the following
elements:
- Identification and mapping of the hazard zones;
- register of valuable movable property (excluding easily portable
personal effects);
- Identification of safe refuge zones to which the population will
be evacuated in case of a dangerous eruption;
- Identification of evacuation routes; their maintenance and
clearance;
- Identification of assembly points for persons awaiting transport
for evacuation;
- Means of transport, traffic control;
- Shelter and accommodation in the refuge zones;
- Inventory of personnel and equipment for search and rescue;
- Hospital and medical services for treatment of injured persons;
- Security in evacuated areas;
- Alert procedures;
- Formulation and communication of public warnings; procedures for
- communication in emergencies;
- Provisions for updating the plan.
5.3 Time scales
One important question, which must be examined at the outset, is the
relation between the time- scale of volcanic events and the time needed
to put various protective measures (i.e., on-site protection and/or
evacuation) into effect.
Experience has shown that the interval between the onset of an
eruption, or of significant precursory phenomena, and a violent climax,
eruption, may range from a few hours to several days, weeks or months.
On the other hand, the time required to put emergency protective
measures into effect depends on the size of the area at hazard, the
density of population and settlement, the degree of mobility of the
population, the transport and communication facilities available, and
the general technological level of development. It will generally be
measured in hours or days.
In practice, it will usually be appropriate to plan for two types of
action:
- Phased response to a gradually developing volcanic crisis, during
which one may expect to have warning of potentially dangerous
volcanic events at least 24 hours before they occur;
- Immediate response to a situation calling for the fastest possible
evacuation of people by whatever means are immediately available.
The more that is known about the history of a volcano, and the
greater the effort that have been devoted to scientific studies and
monitoring of its behavior, the easier it will be to foresee how much
time may be available to take protective action when an eruption does
occur.
5.4 Identification of hazard zones
The first element of a volcanic emergency plan is a map showing the
hazard zones around the volcano which are liable to be affected by one
or more destructive phenomena (pyroclastic flows, mudflows, lava flows,
heavy ash falls, etc.) during an eruption. Such maps normally include
the subdivision of the area exposed to each type of hazard into two or
three subzones corresponding to eruptions of different magnitudes.
The maps of hazard zones will be based upon the maps drawn by
volcanologists, showing the areas devastated during previous (historic,
or geologically reconstructed prehistoric) eruptions. A detailed review
of how these maps are prepared is give in a separate manual (Crandell et
al., 1984). It is worth noting, however, that these hazard maps are
based on purely geological criteria. For practical purposes, e.g.
evacuation plans, etc., the local authorities responsible for emergency
management may be obliged to extend the limits of some zones in order to
take account of available escape routes, the boundaries of settlements,
etc.
5.5 Population census and inventory of property
In order to plan for evacuation it will be necessary to compile a
census of the population in the hazard zones and to update it a least
once every five years, or whenever there are signs of abnormal volcanic
activity. This census will include not only the people permanently
resident in the zones but those who enter them regularly, for instance
for their daily work. It may also be useful to establish an inventory of
animal livestock in each zone, so that arrangements can be made for
their removal if time and facilities permit.
Special note should be made of any property or facilities in the
hazard zones whose loss or destruction would have immediate effects
outside these zones (e.g., power stations, radio transmitters, telephone
exchanges, water supplies, etc.).
5.6 Identification of safe transit points and refuge zones
If the evacuation of a hazard zone is to proceed in an orderly
manner, it is essential that each person in the zone knows where to go
when evacuation starts. For each hazard zone (or part of each zone), the
nearest easily accessible point outside the zone may be identified, to
which the people should go or should be taken, as quickly as possible,
and where they may assemble in safety while arrangements are made for
their reception in a refuge zone.
At each such safe transit point, arrangements will be made for
evacuees to be identified so that, if necessary, a search can be made
for any persons who may be missing. If several such transit points are
set up, there should be good facilities for telephone or radio
communication between them. All evacuees, including those proceeding to
their own alternative accommodation in a safe area, should register
their departure from the danger zone at one or other of the transit
points.
The safe transit points will probably have only minimal facilities
for the shelter and feeding of the evacuees. They should nevertheless be
selected on the basis of a survey of buildings outside the hazard zones
but easily accessible from them, to provide the best possible shelter
for the anticipated maximum number of evacuees. In volcanic eruptions,
tents are not suitable as temporary shelter, especially if sited close
to a high-hazard zones, because they can be easily damaged by falling
ash or lava lumps. Schools, community centers, warehouses or other large
buildings will be preferred.
The plan will also specify the arrangements for the transfer of
evacuees as quickly as possible from transit points to temporary
accommodation in refuge zones elsewhere.
5.7 Identification of evacuation routes
The next element in emergency planning will be to carry out a survey
of the number of people to be moved to safety, the number of vehicles
(and, if appropriate, boats and aircraft) available, and the
serviceability and traffic capacity of each of the roads leading out of
the hazard zones to the location, type and magnitude of the eruption,
and according to the direction of the wind at the time. The main
objective will obviously be to distribute the expected traffic flow as
evenly as possible along all the escape routes which are likely to
remain open. In this context, it will be advisable to consider the
vulnerability of each route not only to ash falls, pyroclastic flows,
mudflows or lava flows emanating from the volcano, but also to
landslides and bridge or tunnel damage which may be caused by strong
local earthquakes. Fine ash fall, even if only a few centimeters thick,
may make asphalt road surfaces slippery, causing traffic congestion on
steep slopes or accidents at corners and road junctions. Each of the
escape routes will need to be examined, and measures taken as far as
possible to control and maintain the traffic flow at expected danger
points.
It is hardly necessary to point out that although the first
consideration in selecting escape routes will be to move people as
quickly as possible out of the immediate danger zone, it will also be
desirable to bring them with the minimum delay to those safe areas where
facilities exist for the reception and accommodation.
5.8 Means of transport, traffic control
As has already been indicated, the plan for transporting people and
their property out of the danger zones should be designed for two levels
of emergency: namely, phased response and immediate evacuation. In a
phased evacuation, when there is sufficient time between the official
evacuation order and the onset of destructive eruption, one may assume
that each family possessing its own vehicle or boat will look after
itself and any neighbors for whom it has space and has made a specific
commitment. All other evacuees will be collected by public transport
from pre-arrange pick-up points. Each public transport driver, including
especially hired or requisitioned truck drivers, will be instructed to
collect people from one of these pick-up points (and not elsewhere). All
private and public vehicle drivers will be briefed on which escape roads
to use and when to leave. The public transport will continue to make
return trips as long as roads remain open or until all evacuees and as
much property as possible have been removed. In the event of an
unexpectedly rapid escalation of destructive activity, transport will
become increasingly difficult to control (due to attempts of people to
scramble on to the nearest available truck or bus), and traffic movement
along the escape routes out of urban areas may become impossible because
of the large number of people leaving on foot. In this case, the plan
will have to be abandoned in favor of a "crash" plan allowing
any vehicles returning to the hazard zone to collect fleeing pedestrians
at ad hoc pick up and turning points (preferably under police or civil
defense control) along the escape route.
- In order to plan evacuation transport in detail, it will be
necessary:
- (a) To establish how many people have private vehicles and/or
boats, and to designate the routes these will follow;
- (b) To make an inventory of the numbers and locations of people
needing public transport;
- (c) To designate pick-up points for public transport;
- (d) To make an inventory of available public transport and drivers
and to assign pick-up points to each of them;
- (e) To make arrangements for requisitioning and fueling private
trucks and buses (and boats if appropriate) and to provide any other
necessary incentives to those normally based outside the hazard
zones whose services may be required. It may be judged necessary or
appropriate, for example, for the government to undertake to make
good any loss or damage suffered by private vehicles or boats
brought into the danger zone to assist with the evacuation.
5.9 Accommodation in refuge zones
Once the evacuees have reached the refuge zones, the problems of
shelter, feeding, hygiene and morale will be similar to those of
evacuees from any other natural or man-made disaster, and hence do not
merit special discussion in a text on volcanic emergency management.
There is, however, one factor in the case of volcanoes which does not
normally apply to cyclone, earthquake or flood disasters: namely, that
the eruption may continue for many months with repeated destructive
paroxysms (possible exceeding in scale the first one), and that it may
not be safe to allow or encourage the return of evacuees, or to commence
rehabilitation and reconstruction, for many months after the initial
disaster-causing event. Volcanic evacuations therefore often last longer
than those caused by other natural phenomena.
5.10 Rescue, first aid and hospital services
During or after an evacuation, some people known to be living or
working in a hazard zone may fail to appear at any of the safe transit
points or in a refuge zone, and it may be necessary to organize searches
for them. There may also be people isolated in areas which are not
exposed to any danger but to which the access routes are blocked by
pyroclastic flows, mudflows, or lava flows. There may be need for aerial
and/or marine reconnaissance missions as soon as conditions are
favorable, for food supply or rescue. It will be necessary to plan what
equipment will be available and how such missions will be carried out.
- First aid and hospital treatment will be needed mainly for three
types of injury:
- (a) Respiratory problems among people who have been exposed to
breathing air laden with fine silicate dust, possibly also
containing dangerous levels of H2S, SO2 and other volcanic gases;
- (b) Broken limbs, lesions and bruises resulting from the impact of
rock fragments or lava lumps falling from a great height;
- (c) Skin burns (first to third degree) and burns to breathing
passages and lungs, resulting from exposure to steam and hot dust
clouds, especially those spreading from the fringes of pyroclastic
flows. In the event of the latter, some of the casualties will
probably be severely burnt over most of their bodies, and in
critical condition.
In addition to the above, there may also be victims of toxic gases
such as carbon monoxide (CO) or of suffocation in pools of carbon
dioxide (CO2) or other gases which may have accumulated in
house cellars, valley bottoms or other low-lying places. Later, medical
problems may arise from the drinking of water from reservoirs or tanks
contaminated by toxic compounds.
5.11 Security in evacuated zones
Unless the danger to life is immediate and obvious, people will be
reluctant to leave their homes without assurances that these will be
guarded against burglary and looting during their absence. Adequate
precautions must therefore be taken to prevent the access of
unauthorized persons to evacuated zones, and regular police patrols of
the zones should be maintained as long as this does not endanger the
lives of the police.
5.12 Alert procedures within government
As distinct from other natural hazards, volcanic hazards are strongly
localized, the most destructive effects of eruptions being limited to
areas within a few tens of kilometers of each volcano. The main
responsibility for action of the kind described above may often devolve
on local or provincial rather than national government agencies, except
when the magnitude of the disaster is such that the local government is
unable to cope with the situation.
The emergency plan will define the responsibilities of the various
departments of government in dealing with the situation and the
procedures by which the various elements of the plan will be put into
effect when required.
Overall responsibility will generally be vested in an
inter-departmental committee composed of representatives of the
government departments concerned and presided over by the head of the
national, provincial or local government. Each government department
represented on the committee will prepare its own plans for action in
response to alerts, in accordance with the directives give by the
committee.
In general, it will be possible to define several stages of alert,
each corresponding to a different level of hazard as assessed by the
scientific team monitoring the volcanic activity. The responsibility for
declaring the various stages of alert will lie with a designated
official, who will act on the advice of the scientific team monitoring
the volcano. There will usually be an element of personal scientific
judgment in deciding what interpretation to place on the observed
volcanic phenomena and much will depend on knowledge of the past history
of the particular volcano. In practice, the decision as to which stage
of alert has been reached may often be based not so much on an objective
assessment of the probability of a violent eruption as on the number of
false alarms which can be tolerated without loss of confidence by the
civil authorities and by the public.
5.13 Formulation and communication of public warnings
Since the measures that can be taken to protect life and property
during a volcanic eruption will affect to some degree the whole
population, it is of vital importance to keep the public fully and
accurately informed of the nature of the hazard and of what is being
done (and what they should do) for their protection. This inevitably
entails some degree of control of the information transmitted to the
public by the news media. This control will usually be exercised by a
responsible official on behalf of the government. In order to avoid
panic or other adverse reactions to the situation, the form and content
of public announcements will, as far as possible, be decided in advance
of any emergency, and the public will be familiarized with the
arrangements made for their information, so that they know what to
expect. The details of these arrangements will vary from place to place
and from country to country, according to the political and social
structure of the community and the technical means available. It is
therefore difficult to lay down any detailed guidelines for public
information and warning. However, as an example, we give here model
texts that could be used to announce by radio the two highest levels of
alert.
5.14 Review and revision of plans
No plan of this kind will remain for ever valid, and it will always
be advisable to provide for its review and revision with appropriate
publicity at regular intervals, say every two or three years. Changes
may become necessary as a result of:
- (a) Progress in scientific knowledge of the volcano in question,
which may lead to a redefinition of the hazard zones around it
- (b) Changes in the pattern of settlement around the volcano, in
the road system, communication networks and other technical
infrastructure, which will modify the procedures for warning and
evacuation in emergencies
- (c) Changes in the administrative structure of the national or
local government
In addition, the plan will certainly have to be revised after each
eruptive episode, in the light of the practical experience gained. Some
imperfections in the plan will probably be revealed by any real
emergency, no matter how much thought and planning has been put into it
beforehand. This implies the existence of some permanent organization
within the national or local government, with prime responsibility for
preparing and executing emergency plans for volcanic and other potential
causes of disaster.
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