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It's not all about drought: What 'drought impacts' monitoring can reveal

Authors :
Walker, David W.
Lima Oliveira, Juliana
Cavalcante, Louise
Kchouk, Sarra
Ribeiro Neto, Germano
Melsen, Lieke A.
Fernandes, Francisco Bergson P.
Mitroi, Veronica
Gondim, Rubens S.
Passos Rodrigues Martins, Eduardo Sávio
van Oel, Pieter
Walker, David W.
Lima Oliveira, Juliana
Cavalcante, Louise
Kchouk, Sarra
Ribeiro Neto, Germano
Melsen, Lieke A.
Fernandes, Francisco Bergson P.
Mitroi, Veronica
Gondim, Rubens S.
Passos Rodrigues Martins, Eduardo Sávio
van Oel, Pieter
Source :
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Drought impacts monitoring has been called the missing piece in drought assessment. The potential to improve drought management is high but uncertain due to rare analyses of impacts datasets, predominantly because there are few impacts monitoring programmes to generate the datasets. Drought impacts monitoring is conducted on the ground in much of Brazil by local observers at monthly and municipality scale to support the Brazilian Drought Monitor. In Ceará state, within drought-prone semiarid northeast Brazil, over 3600 drought impacts reports were completed by agricultural extension officers from 2019 to 2022. We investigated, through manual coding and observer interviews, the reported drought impacts and impact drivers. Analysis provided a catalogue of the experienced impacts and showed that impacts still occur, and are often normalised, during non-drought periods, sometimes as lingering effects of previous droughts. The impact drivers were predominantly non-extreme hydrometeorological conditions or a result of socio-technical vulnerabilities such as insufficient water infrastructure. The normalisation of “impacts” included, in particular: a generally accepted high level of crop losses and consistently low reservoir levels around which the agricultural and domestic systems are adapted. Conventional drought indices often did not align with experienced impact severity, highlighting the limitations of relying solely on these indices for emergency response. Continual impacts monitoring could be extremely valuable anywhere in the world for identifying vulnerabilities and informing proactive measures to reduce drought and other hazard risk, in addition to guiding targeted mitigation efforts.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction
Notes :
Brésil, text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1431953718
Document Type :
Electronic Resource