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â—Ľ winter
2017/1820 “To improve resilience, countries can try
to diversify their diets and include other
sources of protein.” Jessica Gephart
system the nodes are banks and the links are transactions, in
epidemiology the nodes are people and the links are cases of
infection transmission, and in wildlife conservation the nodes might
be isolated populations linked by dispersing animals. There is a huge
diversity of applications for this work.”
Killer disease
Scientists have been warning of the risk of an epidemic sweeping
across our highly connected world for many years. In an urban public
transport network, the confined spaces and high numbers of people
passing through—especially during the daily commute—mean that a
virulent disease could make its way across a city in even a few hours.
The densely populated city of Tokyo is the perfect place to examine
how a public transport system might spread a contagious illness and
the countermeasures needed to protect inhabitants. IIASA researcher
Akira Sasaki and colleagues used the city as a case study to develop
a “network centrality measure,” which assesses how important each
network node—in this case, station—is in terms of disease spread.
Their findings make eye-opening reading, especially for public
health officials seeking to understand how to allocate resources in
the event of an outbreak. Targeting the largest station in the city
with countermeasures is 1,000 times more effective in stopping
disease spread than at the second largest station, they found, even
though the number of people passing through is only around 1.5
times greater. The message is that when the disease strikes, decision
makers need to pour resources heavily into the biggest station.
Malnutrition
Our vast global trade networks can keep hunger at bay by allowing
nations to import food when homegrown produce is scarce. But
these same networks mean that a disruption to food production on
one side of the planet may cause famine on the other.
In the 1980s, Alaskan boats were landing 240,000 tons of fish
every year, which was exported to many distant countries. But in
1989, in one of the worst environmental disasters in history, the
Exxon Valdez oil tanker foundered on Bligh Reef, pouring millions
of tons of crude oil into the near-pristine ecosystem. The complete
closure of the Alaskan fishery that followed led to fish shortages
around the world.
Seafood plays an important role in food security, making up nearly
20% of animal protein consumption globally. And it is not just oil
spills that can disrupt the seafood trade network. Overfishing caused
the collapse of the northwest Atlantic cod fishery in 1992, when
the population fell to just 1% of its original size. Disease, invasive
species, and political turmoil can also reduce a prospering fishery to
a shadow of its former self.
So when a shock hits the system who suffers the most? Jessica
Gephart, a postdoc at the National Socio-Environmental Synthesis
Center, USA, worked on this problem with IIASA colleagues during
the institute’s Young Scientist Summer Program. “We wanted to
understand which countries are the most vulnerable to these kinds of shocks. Our measure of vulnerability included how big a part
seafood plays in their diets, and how much a shock to the seafood
trade might reduce their imports,” says Gephart.
The results show that central and western Africa are at the
greatest risk. “People in these countries rely on seafood as an
important source of protein, and they are importers rather than
exporters,” says IIASA researcher Åke Brännström, a coauthor on
the paper.
On top of that, when seafood is scarce, prices go up, and people
in rich countries can just pay more. Adding this dimension into
the model showed that it puts the poorer countries in central and
western Africa in an even worse position.
“To improve resilience, countries can try to diversify their diets and
include other sources of protein. The sad thing is that this is difficult
in developing countries, which often lack adaptive capacity. Another
approach would be to try to increase the domestic supply of seafood,
but care must be taken to avoid the environmental problems of
overfishing and unsustainable aquaculture practices,” says Gephart.
Disaster despair
Natural disasters provide perhaps the most powerful image of
system collapse. A hurricane that flattens buildings, floods roads,
and downs electricity grids has very effectively brought a system
to its knees.
In South Asia this summer over 1,200 people were killed in
flooding and landslides as a result of severe monsoon rains, with
around 40 million people affected by the catastrophe. The media
showed pictures of people wading through floodwaters clutching
their few remaining possessions, or families huddled in the wreckage
of their homes. But what follows a disaster like this often doesn’t
make the headlines. The loss of prime agricultural land, damaged
infrastructure, and disruption of children’s education make for
starvation, poverty, and lost livelihoods long after the flood waters
subside.
The solution is fundamentally the same as for the financial
markets or global trade networks—resilience must be built into the
system. “We can look at disaster risk, that’s about probability, but
really a disaster like a flood or a storm is only the trigger,” says IIASA
researcher Stefan Hochrainer-Stigler. “Systemic risk is different, it’s
the risk to the whole system, and it stems from how the elements
of a system are connected.”
To understand how a nation’s economy will cope
when put under the stress of a natural disaster, IIASA
researchers have been using groundbreaking agent-
based modeling. “We are now able to model an
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Buch options, Band winter 2017/2018"
options
Band winter 2017/2018
- Titel
- options
- Band
- winter 2017/2018
- Ort
- Laxenburg
- Datum
- 2017
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 32
- Kategorien
- Zeitschriften Options Magazine