Page Header

  • Home
  • About
  • Login
  • Register
  • Categories
  • Search
  • Current
  • Archives
  • Announcements
  • SUBMISSION
  • TDMRC
Home > Vol 4, No 3 (2021) > Alrehaili

 

About The Author

Naif Rashed Alrehaili orcid
University College London, London, United Kingdom.
United Kingdom

Publisher:

TDMRC Universitas Syiah Kuala

E-ISSN: 2527-4341

 P-ISSN: 2808-439X

An Investigation into Emergency Planning Requirements and Challenges of Disaster Management in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

Naif Rashed Alrehaili

Abstract

Every year, the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) is exposed to different natural hazards. However, flash floods have been the most common hazard during the previous few decades. Between 2000 and 2020, over 1,000 people lost their lives from flash floods, resulting in an economic loss amounting to billions of US dollars. By focusing on flash floods, a systematic review of the extracted data was conducted. They were analyzed based on the suitability of their content and data for emergency planning requirements and disaster management challenges in the KSA. A total of 104 articles, papers, and plans were reviewed, of which only 18 complete papers met the inclusion criteria, including one plan and the General Directorate of Civil Defense (GDCD) website. The author has concluded that: 1) the essential requirements for emergency planning in the KSA include: conducting studies that show potential natural hazards, their locations, and their implications, and taking appropriate measures that reduce the possible causes of natural hazards; 2) The challenges facing the disaster management in the KSA are: lack of policies; the ambiguity of legislation and plans; poor coordination between stakeholders; lack of databases. This is the first investigation into emergency planning requirements and challenges of disaster management in the KSA. Furthermore, a scientific consensus predicts an increase in the frequency and magnitude of flash floods in the KSA. Therefore, the gaps need to be addressed in order to reduce the impact on inhabitants and infrastructure.

 Keywords

emergency preparedness; emergency planning; disaster response; flash floods; the KSA.

 Full Text:

PDF

References

Abdalla, R. (2018). Urbanization and Crisis Management Using Geomatics Technologies. Crisis Management: Theory and Practice, 1.

Abosuliman, S. S., Kumar, A., Alam, F., & Rasjidin, R. (2013). Disaster planning and management in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. In Proc. 2013 International Conference on Economics and Social Science, 20-21.

Abosuliman, S. S., Kumar, A., & Alam, F. (2014). Disaster preparedness and management in Saudi Arabia: An empirical investigation. International Journal of Economics and Management Engineering, 7(12), 3256-3260.

Abualnaja, Y.O. (2011). Sea Level Activities in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. GLOSS GE, 12.

Alamri, Y. A. (2010). Emergency management in Saudi Arabia: Past, present and future. Un. Of Christchurch report, New Zealand, 21.

Al-Bassam, A.M., Zaidi, F.K. & Hussein, M.T. (2014). Natural hazards in Saudi Arabia. Extreme natural events, disaster risks and societal implications, 243-251.

Alharbi, M. (2008). Strategic Planning for the Development of Civil Defence in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Naif Arab University Journal (in Arabic), 221–227.

Alkhalaf, A.K. & Basset, H.A. (2013). Diagnostic study of a severe thunderstorm over Jeddah. Atmospheric and Climate Sciences, 3, 150-164.

Almazroui, M. (2011). Sensitivity of a regional climate model on the simulation of high intensity rainfall events over the Arabian Peninsula and around Jeddah (Saudi Arabia). Theoretical and applied climatology, 104(1), 261-276.

Almazroui, M. (2013). Simulation of present and future climate of Saudi Arabia using a regional climate model (PRECIS). International journal of climatology, 33(9), 2247-2259.

Al Saud, M.M. (2015). Flood control management for the city and surroundings of Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Springer.

Amin, S., Hijji, M., Iqbal, R., Harrop, W., & Chang, V. (2019). Fuzzy expert system-based framework for flood management in Saudi Arabia. Cluster Computing, 22(5), 11723-11740.

Bin Ottai, N. H. (2017). Capacity assessment framework to enhance disaster resilience within Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (Doctoral dissertation, University of Salford).

Burby, R. J. (2003). Making plans that matter: Citizen involvement and government action. Journal of the American Planning Association, 69(1), 33-49.

Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED). (2021). EM-DAT Database. Available online: https://www.emdat.be/database accessed on 6 May 2021.

Ewing, L. & Synolakis, C. (2011). Coastal resilience: Can we get beyond planning the last disaster? In Solutions to Coastal Disasters, 936-947.

Flyvbjerg, B., Bruzelius, N., & Rothengatter, W. (2003). Megaprojects and risk: An anatomy of ambition. Cambridge university press.

Friedmann, J. (2020). Planning in the public domain: From knowledge to action. Princeton University Press.

General Directorate of Civil Defence (GDCD). (2020a). National Plan for Natural Disasters Risk Reduction. Ministry of Interior. Saudi Arabia. Available online at: https://www.998.gov.sa/Ar/CivilDefence. (Retrieved 23 October 2020).

General Directorate of Civil Defence (GDCD). (2020b). Civil Defence System and Its Regulations. Ministry of Interior. Saudi Arabia. Available at: https://www.998.gov.sa/Ar/CivilDefenceLists/Pages/default.aspx. (Retrieved 23 November 2020).

General Directorate of Civil Defence (GDCD). (2021). Official Statistic. Ministry of Interior. Saudi Arabia.

Gulf News., November 17. (2015). Flash floods turn deadly in Jeddah. URL:https://gulfnews.com/world/gulf/saudi/flashfloods-turn-deadly-in-jeddah-1.1621189.

Haggag M, and El-Badry H. (2013). Mesoscale numerical study of quasi-stationary convective system over Jeddah in November 2009. Atmospheric and Climate Sciences, 3(1), 73-86.

Lam, N.S., Reams, M., Li, K., Li, C. & Mata, L.P. (2016). Measuring community resilience to coastal hazards along the Northern Gulf of Mexico. Natural hazards review, 17(1), 04015013.

Ledraa, T.A. & Al-Ghamdi, A.M. (2014). A Review of Flood Hazard Planning, Management and Mapping within the Context of Saudi Arabia. In 5th International Conference on Cartography and GIS, 699-700.

Ledraa, T. A., & Al-Ghamdi, A. M. (2020). Planning and Management Issues and Challenges of Flash Flooding Disasters in Saudi Arabia: The Case of Riyadh City. J. Archit. Plan, 32, 155-171.

Ministry of Higher Education. (2015). Atlas of Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. 2d Edition. Riyadh.

Momani, N. M., & Fadil, A. S. (2010). Changing public policy due to Saudi City of Jeddah flood disaster. Journal of Social Sciences, 6(3), 424-428.

Mizutori, M., & Guha-Sapir, D. (2020). Human Cost of Disasters: An Overview of the Last 20 years (2000-2019). Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) and United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR), Belgium and Switzerland.

Theilen-Willige, B. & Wenzel, H. (2019). Remote sensing and GIS contribution to a natural hazard database in western Saudi Arabia. Geosciences, 9(9), 380-392

Youssef, A. M., Sefry, S. A., Pradhan, B., & Alfadail, E. A. (2016). Analysis on causes of flash flood in Jeddah city (Kingdom of Saudi Arabia) of 2009 and 2011 using multi-sensor remote sensing data and GIS. Geomatics, Natural Hazards and Risk, 7(3), 1018-1042.‏

DOI: https://doi.org/10.24815/ijdm.v4i3.21722

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.
Copyright (c) 2021 Naif Rashed Alrehaili Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Journal Content

Browse
  • By Issue
  • By Author
  • By Title
  • Other Journals
  • Categories
User

Indexed in:

        

Tools:

Visitors: 

 

Template:

Font Size

Keywords Bangladesh COVID-19 Indonesia climate change community community resilience coping strategies disaster disaster management disaster preparedness disaster risk reduction institutional effectiveness knowledge local wisdom natural disaster preparedness religiosity resilience tsunami vaccination vulnerability
Article Tools
Abstract
Print this article
Indexing metadata
How to cite item
Finding References
Review policy
Email this article (Login required)
Email the author (Login required)
Open Journal Systems