Assessment of the effects and impacts of the Hurricane Matthew: the Bahamas

The passage of Hurricane Matthew through The Bahamas in October 2016 marks the second time in just over a year that the country was affected by a Category 4 hurricane. However, unlike 2015’s Hurricane Joaquin, which affected islands having a relatively low population, Hurricane Matthew’s greatest im...

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Publicado: ECLAC 2020
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Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/11362/45966
http://hdl.handle.net/11362/45966
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spelling oai:dspace6-d1:11362-45966 Assessment of the effects and impacts of the Hurricane Matthew: the Bahamas NU. CEPAL IDB HURACANES DESASTRES NATURALES ASPECTOS ECONOMICOS ASPECTOS AMBIENTALES ASPECTOS SOCIALES EVALUACION POBLACION SALUD VIVIENDA EDUCACION INFRAESTRUCTURA FISICA AGUA SERVICIOS DE SANEAMIENTO ELECTRICIDAD TURISMO PESQUERIAS HURRICANES NATURAL DISASTERS ECONOMIC ASPECTS ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS SOCIAL ASPECTS EVALUATION POPULATION HEALTH HOUSING EDUCATION PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE WATER SANITATION SERVICES ELECTRICITY TOURISM FISHERIES The passage of Hurricane Matthew through The Bahamas in October 2016 marks the second time in just over a year that the country was affected by a Category 4 hurricane. However, unlike 2015’s Hurricane Joaquin, which affected islands having a relatively low population, Hurricane Matthew’s greatest impact was felt on the country’s population centres of New Providence and Grand Bahama, as well as in the district of North Andros. Damage in these areas was caused by high winds and storm surge associated with the hurricane, and was exacerbated by construction practices and the siting of communities and infrastructure in vulnerable locations. Soon after the hurricane passed, the government of The Bahamas asked the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) to assess the resulting damages, losses and additional costs. The IDB requested assistance from the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) for technical assistance with the assessment. This report presents results of the assessment. It also presents recommendations to guide a resilient reconstruction process that can reduce vulnerabilities and risks for the population and for every sector of the economy. 2020-08-31T22:51:22Z 2020-08-31T22:51:22Z 2020-08-31 Texto Documento Completo http://hdl.handle.net/11362/45966 LC/TS.2020/32 en .pdf application/pdf BAHAMAS BAHAMAS ECLAC IDB
building Cepal
institution Sistema Integrado de Documentación
collection Libros Digitales Cepal
format Libro en línea
title Assessment of the effects and impacts of the Hurricane Matthew: the Bahamas
spellingShingle Assessment of the effects and impacts of the Hurricane Matthew: the Bahamas
HURACANES
DESASTRES NATURALES
ASPECTOS ECONOMICOS
ASPECTOS AMBIENTALES
ASPECTOS SOCIALES
EVALUACION
POBLACION
SALUD
VIVIENDA
EDUCACION
INFRAESTRUCTURA FISICA
AGUA
SERVICIOS DE SANEAMIENTO
ELECTRICIDAD
TURISMO
PESQUERIAS
HURRICANES
NATURAL DISASTERS
ECONOMIC ASPECTS
ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS
SOCIAL ASPECTS
EVALUATION
POPULATION
HEALTH
HOUSING
EDUCATION
PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE
WATER
SANITATION SERVICES
ELECTRICITY
TOURISM
FISHERIES
title_short Assessment of the effects and impacts of the Hurricane Matthew: the Bahamas
title_full Assessment of the effects and impacts of the Hurricane Matthew: the Bahamas
title_fullStr Assessment of the effects and impacts of the Hurricane Matthew: the Bahamas
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of the effects and impacts of the Hurricane Matthew: the Bahamas
title_sort assessment of the effects and impacts of the hurricane matthew: the bahamas
topic HURACANES
DESASTRES NATURALES
ASPECTOS ECONOMICOS
ASPECTOS AMBIENTALES
ASPECTOS SOCIALES
EVALUACION
POBLACION
SALUD
VIVIENDA
EDUCACION
INFRAESTRUCTURA FISICA
AGUA
SERVICIOS DE SANEAMIENTO
ELECTRICIDAD
TURISMO
PESQUERIAS
HURRICANES
NATURAL DISASTERS
ECONOMIC ASPECTS
ENVIRONMENTAL ASPECTS
SOCIAL ASPECTS
EVALUATION
POPULATION
HEALTH
HOUSING
EDUCATION
PHYSICAL INFRASTRUCTURE
WATER
SANITATION SERVICES
ELECTRICITY
TOURISM
FISHERIES
description The passage of Hurricane Matthew through The Bahamas in October 2016 marks the second time in just over a year that the country was affected by a Category 4 hurricane. However, unlike 2015’s Hurricane Joaquin, which affected islands having a relatively low population, Hurricane Matthew’s greatest impact was felt on the country’s population centres of New Providence and Grand Bahama, as well as in the district of North Andros. Damage in these areas was caused by high winds and storm surge associated with the hurricane, and was exacerbated by construction practices and the siting of communities and infrastructure in vulnerable locations. Soon after the hurricane passed, the government of The Bahamas asked the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) to assess the resulting damages, losses and additional costs. The IDB requested assistance from the United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) for technical assistance with the assessment. This report presents results of the assessment. It also presents recommendations to guide a resilient reconstruction process that can reduce vulnerabilities and risks for the population and for every sector of the economy.
publisher ECLAC
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/11362/45966
http://hdl.handle.net/11362/45966
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