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HomeWhat we doCountry informationAppeals and fundingCurrent focusResources
About FAO
africa
ag
agriculture
aud
Biodiversity
bioenergy
biotech
Dimitra
UN coordination
economic
emergencies
Home
What we do
Chemical hazards
Complex emergencies
Drought
Earthquakes
Floods
Forest fires
Landslides
Nuclear release and radioactivity
Tropical storms
Transboundary pests and diseases
Tsunami
Country information
Appeals and funding
Current focus
Resources
europeanunion
europe
FAO Home
FAO Initiative on Soaring Food Prices
FCIT
fi
foodclimate
foodchain
Gender
Get Involved
G77
Hunger Portal
iee-follow-up-committee
KCE
LON
Multidisciplinary areas
News
news-management
nr
organicag
Publications
pwb
SPFS
tc
worldfoodsituation
WFD2007
WSFS

Hazard and emergency types

Earthquakes

An average of 3.5 million people are affected by earthquakes every year. Risk is normally associated with urban centres but effects on the rural sector and farming communities can be devastating.

Earthquakes impact on food security and agriculture-based livelihoods through:

  • loss and injury of family members and workforce
  • loss of crop yields and livestock
  • damage to irrigation systems
  • damage to people’s homes, animal shelters, stock areas and business premises
Livelihood recovery and rehabilitation strategy in Pakistan and Indonesia

To create a more solid link between short and long-term emergency responses in these post-earthquake countries, FAO used the Sustainable Livelihoods Approach to frame needs assessment and response planning. A Rapid Livelihoods Assessment studied the impact on people’s livelihoods, with findings used to design projects and National Livelihoods Rehabilitation Strategies.

In Pakistan, the Livelihoods Rehabilitation Strategy was developed by the National Earthquake Reconstruction and Rehabilitation Authority (ERRA), with support of FAO and the International Labour Organization.

The objective is to rehabilitate people’s livelihoods with an emphasis on agricultural and off-farm income-generating activities. The strategy is based on Community Livelihood Rehabilitation Plans (CLRPs), driven by the communities.

In Indonesia, the plan follows the same bottom-up approach.  

In both cases, rehabilitation activities depend on the choice of the communities themselves as reflected in their CLRPs.