Indicator: 1.5.1
0.a. Goal
Goal 13: Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts
0.b. Target
Target 13.1: Strengthen resilience and adaptive capacity to climate-related hazards and natural disasters in all countries
0.c. Indicator
Indicator 13.1.1: Number of deaths, missing persons and directly affected persons attributed to disasters per 100,000 population
0.e. Metadata update
2018-03-01
0.g. International organisations(s) responsible for global monitoring
United Nations Office for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR)
1.a. Organisation
United Nations Office for Disaster Reduction (UNISDR)
2.a. Definition and concepts
Definition:
This indicator measures the number of people who died, went missing or were directly affected by disasters per 100,000 population.
Concepts:
Death: The number of people who died during the disaster, or directly after, as a direct result of the hazardous event.
Missing: The number of people whose whereabouts is unknown since the hazardous event. It includes people who are presumed dead, for whom there is no physical evidence such as a body, and for which an official/legal report has been filed with competent authorities.
Directly affected: The number of people who have suffered injury, illness or other health effects; who were evacuated, displaced, relocated or have suffered direct damage to their livelihoods, economic, physical, social, cultural and environmental assets. Indirectly affected are people who have suffered consequences, other than or in addition to direct effects, over time, due to disruption or changes in economy, critical infrastructure, basic services, commerce or work, or social, health and psychological consequences.
3.a. Data sources
Data sources and collection method:
Data provider at national level is appointed Sendai Framework Focal Points. In most countries disaster data are collected by line ministries and national disaster loss databases are established and managed by special purpose agencies including national disaster management agencies, civil protection agencies, and meteorological agencies. The Sendai Framework Focal Points in each country are responsible of data reporting through the Sendai Framework Monitoring System.
4.a. Rationale
The Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030 was adopted by UN Member States in March 2015 as a global policy of disaster risk reduction. Among the global targets, “Target A: Substantially reduce global disaster mortality by 2030, aiming to lower average per 100,000 global mortality between 2020-2030 compared with 2005-2015” and “Target B: Substantially reduce the number of affected people globally by 2030, aiming to lower the average global figure per 100,000 between 2020-2030 compared with 2005-2015” will contribute to sustainable development and strengthen economic, social, health and environmental resilience. The economic, environmental and social perspectives would include poverty eradication, urban resilience, and climate change adaptation.
The open-ended intergovernmental expert working group on indicators and terminology relating to disaster risk reduction (OIEWG) established by the General Assembly (resolution 69/284) has developed a set of indicators to measure global progress in the implementation of the Sendai Framework, which was endorsed by the UNGA (OIEWG report A/71/644). The relevant global indicators for the Sendai Framework will be used to report for this indicator.
Disaster loss data is greatly influenced by large-scale catastrophic events, which represent important outliers. UNISDR recommends countries report the data by event, so that complementary analysis can be undertaken to obtain trends and patterns in which such catastrophic events (that can represent outliers) can be included or excluded.
4.b. Comment and limitations
The Sendai Framework Monitoring System has been developed to measure the progress in the implementation of the Sendai Framework by UNGA endorsed indicators. Member States will be able to report through the System from March 2018. The data for SDG indicators will be compiled and reported by UNISDR.
Proxy, alternative and additional indicators:
In most cases international data sources only record events that surpass some threshold of impact and use secondary data sources which usually have non uniform or even inconsistent methodologies, producing heterogeneous datasets.
4.c. Method of computation
Related indicators as of February 2020
Where:
A2 Number of deaths attributed to disasters;
A3 Number of missing persons attributed to disasters; and
B1 Number of directly affected people attributed to disasters.
* Detailed methodologies can be found in the Technical Guidance (see below the Reference section)
4.f. Treatment of missing values (i) at country level and (ii) at regional level
• At country level
• At regional and global levels
5. Data availability and disaggregation
Data availability:
Time series:
Disaggregation:
Number of deaths attributed to disasters;
Number of missing persons attributed to disasters; and
Number of directly affected people attributed to disasters.
[Desirable Disaggregation]:
Hazard
Geography (Administrative Unit)
Sex
Age (3 categories)
Disability
Income
6. Comparability/deviation from international standards
Sources of discrepancies:
7. References and Documentation
Official SDG Metadata URL: https://unstats.un.org/sdgs/metadata/files/Metadata-01-05-01.pdf
Internationally agreed methodology and guideline URL:
Technical guidance for monitoring and reporting on progress in achieving the global targets of the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNISDR 2017)
https://www.preventionweb.net/files/54970_collectionoftechnicalguidancenoteso.pdf
Other references:
Report of the open-ended intergovernmental expert working group on indicators and terminology relating to disaster risk reduction (OEIWG). Endorsed by UNGA on 2nd February 2017. Available at: https://www.preventionweb.net/publications/view/51748