Acknowledging the disastrous implications of Climate Change for socioeconomic development, the public-private institute of the Geomatics Busines Park has since 2002 worked on a new concept coined Extreme Events Engineering and Monitoring (EEEM). In EEEM, the word 'Engineering' stands for all types of logic reasoning and activities as long as these help people to firmly reduce their vulnerability to extreme events. We see EEEM as a 'bi-polar' concept, aiming to deeply integrate a long chain of analyses and activities. On the 'high end' of the EEEM chain, Earth Observation plays an important role. Down at the 'lower end', EEEM firmly rests in the mud in the form of grass roots based evacuation and relief plans as well as long term land use improvements. Between both poles of the EEEM chain, the so-called Integrated Vulnerability Analysis (IVA) forms the central defence strategy against this 'axis of peril'. Vietnam is very vulnerable for natural disasters such as flooding, especially during such extreme events as overflowing rivers and excessive local rainfall during typhoons. This paper describes an initial application of EEEM at the vulnerable city of Hue, which was struck in 1999 by extremely heavy rainfall and extensive flooding of the Perfume River. © 2005 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.
CITATION STYLE
Hien, H. M., Trung, T. N., Looijen, W., & Hulsbergen, K. (2005). Flood vulnerability analysis and mapping in Vietnam. In Geo-information for Disaster Management (pp. 67–83). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-27468-5_6
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