Natural
disasters could cost Vietnam US$6.7 billion
Viet Nam will
likely face damages of more than VND141.2 trillion (US$6.7 billion) due to
natural disasters such as typhoons, floods or earthquakes in the next 50
years, the World Bank has said.
At a
conference on Viet Nam’s disaster risk finance held yesterday, the World Bank
evaluated that Viet Nam was exposed to many natural hazards, including
typhoons, tornadoes and floods. As estimated, about 60 per cent of its total
land area and 71 per cent of its population were at risk of cyclones and
floods.
The average
economic loss from floods and typhoons was estimated at about 0.8 per cent of
the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).
Sebastian
Eckardt, lead economist for the World Bank in Viet Nam said that the World
Bank, together with the Government of Switzerland, supported the country in
improving disaster risk finance and insurance solutions through the building
of its catastrophe risk model.
The model
would help the Government and other organisations evaluate potential losses
and better prepare for financial response to the impact of disasters before
they occurred, he said.
Measures
should be chalked out to protect the State budget against natural disasters
and develop insurance markets over domestic catastrophe risk.
Olivier
Mahul, programme manager of disaster risk financing solutions, said that Viet
Nam would likely face an average damage to private and public assets of up to
VND30.2 trillion ($1.4 billion) per year.
Of which,
residential and public assets such as buildings and infrastructure accounted
for 65 and 11 per cent of total damage, respectively.
Floods,
typhoons and earthquakes would remove $6.7 billion from the country over the
next 50 years, he said. The average damage of some certain vulnerable
localities could be more than VND1.7 trillion ($76 million) annually.
Localities in the north-central region, with a high poverty rate, would be
more vulnerable to natural disasters.
Olivier
said that the Vietnamese Government had funding sources such as contingency
budgets at central and grassroots-levels, State reserves, financial reserve
funds, disaster prevention and control funds, and donor grants.
However,
the State budget seemed to be the main fund for the job. Other sources such
as the disaster prevention and control funds had not been fully put into
operation across provinces due to some restrictions.
Risk
transfer instruments such as insurance were quite new and remained unpopular,
he added.
Le Thi Thuy
Van, head of the Ministry of Finance’s Market Research Committee said that
the State budget could only support a part of the total annual loss.
It could
only provide for post-disaster relief and recovery policies. The budget for
post-disaster for development capital expenditure remained insufficient.
In the case
of more frequent and larger disasters, the State budget could face financial
distress both for emergency relief and infrastructure recovery investment,
she said.
Van said
among financial measures for disaster mitigation, insurance was an effective
method to reduce the burden on the State budget. However, she said, the
development of natural calamity insurance in the country required short and
long-term roadmaps.
At the
conference, Olivier Mahul concluded that a specific financial assessment
would increase the effectiveness of financial management.
The
catastrophe risk model would help inform national financial protection
strategy and poverty reduction and social protection strategies, develop the
catastrophe risk market and urban planning.
He also
noted that the building of a financial protection strategy should be part of
a disaster risk management and climate change plan and should complement
investment in prevention and risk mitigation.
VNS
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Thứ Tư, 16 tháng 11, 2016
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