|
Biodiversity
Landscape Development
Management of Natural Hazards
Natural Resources
Forest Ecosystems
Research Units
In focus
Staff
Organization
Mission and Tasks
Locations
History
Job opportunities
Contact and maps
Risk concept of the PLANATIn the Alpine biosphere, natural hazards cannot be prevented entirely. Despite the substantial sums that have been invested in avalanche barriers and check dams, such hazards repeatedly endanger people and destroy buildings and transportation routes. Against this background, safety experts have begun to adopt a new approach. In the past they sought to prevent natural hazards with every available means, but their focus is now turning to reducing the risks associated with such hazards. In a technical context, risk is defined as the probability of damage in a certain amount (e.g. 100,000 francs) occurring within a defined period (e.g. one year). The strategy adopted by the National Platform for Natural Hazards (PLANAT) in 2004 made this notion of minimising risk (risk concept) the focal point of its approach to natural hazards. A similar concept for managing risk has long since been put into practice in other fields, including in the civil use of nuclear energy.
Code of practiceWithin the framework of its action plans for 2005 - 2008 and 2009 – 2011, PLANAT closed various gaps in order fully to implement the risk concept. As a key foundation for the concept, it commissioned the SLF to oversee production of a code of practice for managing risk. The code of practice describes the theoretical basis of the concept and illustrates practical ways of reducing the risk of natural hazards from an economic, ecological and social perspective (sustainability principles). New calculation toolsThe risk management code of practice makes it clear that action has to be taken during a natural hazard event (intervention), as well as after (recovery or reconstruction) and before (prevention) such an event. The goal is to find a combination of planning, technical, biological and organisational measures that is capable of minimising the risk (accomplishing the desired benefit) while incurring as little cost as possible. In order to calculate the cost-benefit ratio, the SLF has joined forces in recent years with other institutions to develop a variety of instruments (EconoMe Tools). They are being used by expert agencies and public authorities as an aid to prioritising protective measures. The tools also raise the users' awareness of the risk-based approach and enables them more clearly to explain to those concerned the reasoning behind decisions in favour of certain measures. Sharing information about risks is a key element of risk management. Managing risk successfully depends on the public at large accepting the authorities' decisions and contributing themselves to reducing the risks that accompany natural hazards. Although natural hazards continue to represent a major challenge, especially against the backdrop of climate change, safety experts can now use the risk concept to engage in a more effective evaluation and discussion of various scenarios and courses of action. Contact |