Identification

Title
Pakistan 2014 floods recovery needs assessment
Abstract
In the first week of September 2014, heavy monsoon rains and floods in the catchment areas of the eastern rivers of Chenab, Ravi, Sutlej, and Jhelum, resulted in flash floods that collapsed homes in Punjab, Gilgit Baltistan and Azad Jammu and Kashmir (AJ&K). According to latest figures, 367 persons lost their lives, more than 2.5 million people were affected by the floods and rains, and 129,880 houses were partially damaged or destroyed. Over 1million acres of cropland and 250,000 farmers were affected, in most cases resulting in the loss of standing food, fodder or cash crops. Non-farm sources of livelihoods and services affected include many small enterprises, manufacturing and processing businesses and loss of wage employment due to disruption of the economy. At present, the biggest challenge is that of restoring lives and livelihoods ideally to a level where they become more resilient to future disasters, and structural and non-structural disaster risk reduction measures are inculcated at all steps of recovery process. The estimated cost of the recovery effort is US$ 439.7 million, including US$ 56.2 million which are would help build resilience of the affected population and their productive assets. This Recovery Needs Assessment describes the strategic basis for a response to the 2014 floods in Pakistan. The document identifies and estimates the cost steps to bridge the gap between relief and rehabilitation by concentrating on interim, transitional and immediate actions to assist the affected population restore their lives and livelihoods. The RNA prioritises four sectors: Housing, Agriculture, Livelihoods and Community Infrastructure, with Disaster Risk Reduction and “build back better” as the overarching themes. The RNA caseload and cost estimates are based on the data collected by the governments of Punjab and AJ&K through the district governments and relevant line departments. Both the governments have put in place multiple levels of validation and triangulation to ensure the credibility of needs and recovery costs. In addition, the teams of NDMA and relevant UN agencies (FAO, ILO, UNDP, UN-Habitat and WFP) carried out spot checks to selected locations to verify the data reported by the provincial governments.
License
Public Domain (PD)
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Publication Date
Nov. 11, 2014, 2:33 p.m.
Category
Geoscientific Information
information pertaining to earth sciences. Examples: geophysical features and processes, geology, minerals, sciences dealing with the composition, structure and origin of the earth s rocks, risks of earthquakes, volcanic activity, landslides, gravity information, soils, permafrost, hydrogeology, erosion
Regions
Pakistan
Approved
No
Published
Yes
Featured
No
DOI
None
Attribution
None
Responsible

Name
Andy (andy)
email
Position
Organization
Location
Voice
Fax
Information

Identification Image
Spatial Extent
---
Projection System
EPSG:4326
Extension x0
None
Extension x1
None
Extension y0
None
Extension y1
None
Features

Language
English
Supplemental Information
No information provided
Contact Points

Name
Stu Fraser (stu)
email
sfraser@worldbank.org
Position
Senior Disaster RIsk Management Specialist
Organization
World Bank
Location
Voice
Fax

References

Link Online
/documents/494
Metadata Page
/documents/494/metadata_detail
Online Link
/documents/494/download

Metadata Author

Name
Andy (andy)
email
Position
Organization
Location
Voice
Fax