Posted:
23 March 2008 at
2:03 pm (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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There is no more important long-term challenge in protecting businesses, homes and lives than bridging the knowledge gaps between what I call the “resilience professions”: business continuity, disaster response, disaster recovery, emergency management, crisis management, risk management and security. Asia is about to host the first conference I’ve seen to take on that challenge explicitly.
The 2008 International Disaster Management Conference on Public Private Partnership will bring together for the first time in Asia both public- and private-sector professionals in disaster, emergency and business continuity management as both presenters and attendees. The conference is on April 16 & 17 in Delhi, India and is endorsed by India’s National Disaster Management Authority.
In one conference you’ll be able to hear and meet senior executives from, for example, the Red Cross/Red Crescent Society, the British Standards Institute, India’s Oil Industry Safety Directorate, the Micro-Insurance Academy, the Federation of Indian Chambers of Commerce & Industry, the US Agency for International Development International Resources Group – and the Mumbai airport. There are about twenty (20) presentations, plus India’s normal introduction and thank-you rituals.
The conference is organized by volunteers at Responsenet, an initiative of the Aidmatrix Foundation, a non-governmental organization (NGO) supported by high-tech companies. Some financial support for the conference has been given by the International Association of Emergency Managers (IAEM), GeoHazards International, Tata Indicom and Sphere India. Last year’s conference organized by Responsenet on supply chain for disasters drew 120 people. Read more... (676 words, 0 images, estimated 2:42 mins reading time)
Posted:
30 January 2008 at
11:59 am (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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An epidemic of avian influenza in West Bengal, India has the Indian “government in panic mode”, according to the Times of India web site. And with good reason: 15 million of West Bengal’s 80 million people are crammed into its capital city, Kolkata (Calcutta), a petri dish of poverty, pollution, political intransigence and hopeless public health. It is the city where Mother Teresa founded the Missionaries of Charity order.
If the infection reaches Kolkata’s poultry markets, there is a much greater risk of animal-to-human transmission than there has been in Indonesia or Vietnam, where infections of H5N1 influenza have already crossed species from animals to humans.
There have been many more human infections of highly-pathogenic influenza in Indonesia (120 cases, 98 deaths) and Vietnam (102 cases, 48 deaths) than in India. There were three outbreaks of avian influenza in India in 2006, but there have been no human deaths there, yet.
But Kolkata is a whole other miasma of misery. The population density of Kolkata is 24,000 people per square kilometer (62,000 per square mile), the second highest in the world. The population density of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam’s largest city, is only 3,000 per square kilometer (8,000 per square mile), a fraction of Kolkata’s. Even the density of Jakarta, Indonesia, at 12,500 people per square kilometer (33,000 per square mile), is just half that of Kolkata. Read more... (441 words, 0 images, estimated 1:46 mins reading time)
Posted:
1 September 2006 at
9:49 am (UTC +8 hours) by Nathaniel Forbes , Singapore. |
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The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) released in August new guidance for financial institutions. The RBI directive suggests how India’s 50,000 bank branches may help customers and communities after “natural calamities.” The guidelines also supplement RBI’s BCP instructions issued in April 2005. FFI: Read Nat Forbes’ BCP Confidential blog post about RBI’s guidelines.
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