Challenges and Opportunities
Despite the many changes that have transpired in emergency management in Scandinavia over the past few decades, new threats keep emerging as do new consequences of current threats. Some of the institutional challenges Denmark, Norway, and Sweden are facing include ones that are familiar to the U.S., such as civilian-military cooperation and public-private sector partnerships for preparedness and response. Another challenge, rooted in deep-seated social behavior, is to recognize, accept, and act on the fact that certain types of disasters are, in fact, avoidable through decisions on where, when, and how to site, construct, and carry out certain activities. In seismically active areas, for instance, it is only a matter of time until an earthquake occurs. Limiting land uses in such areas, or in other high risk areas such as those prone to flooding and landslides, would reduce society’s vulnerability and boost its robustness.
Opportunity sometimes may accompany new risks and vulnerabilities. Such appears to be the case with respect to climate change. Sweden, for instance, has catalogued not only the risks climate change poses but also the opportunities in terms of new land use patterns, increased agricultural production, and lower energy demand.
One of the most fruitful avenues of opportunity for all three Scandinavian countries is their increasing participation in multilateral organizations that are addressing disaster reduction and stronger emergency management. As members of the EU, for instance, Denmark and Sweden participate in mutual aid agreements as well as ongoing crisis management initiatives. Norway, through its membership in the European Free Trade Association (EFTA), which has an agreement with the EU, can request aid as it did to fight the 2008 forest fires Denmark and Norway are both members of NATO, which has a number of civil emergency management programs. All three countries belong to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and the Nordic Council, among other organizations.
Conclusion
Despite dramatic strengthening of emergency management in Denmark, Norway, and Sweden, significant challenges remain. In part, this reflects the ever-changing and sometimes unpredictable nature of the risk and vulnerability landscape. For all three countries, crises abroad and international disaster reduction initiatives have been every bit as important as domestic incidents in shaping their emergency management policies, institutions, and practices. Recognizing the impossibility of imagining every possible type of crisis that may arise, the Scandinavian countries are focused on creating and sustaining emergency management institutions that have sufficient capability and capacity to adapt quickly to the unexpected.
References
Denmark
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Beredskabsstyrelsen (Danish Emergency Management Agency/DEMA). National Sårbarhedsrapport 2006 (National Vulnerability Report 2006).
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Beredskabsstyrelsen (Danish Emergency Management Agency/DEMA). National Sårbarhedsrapport 2005 (National Vulnerability Report 2005).
Beredskabsstyrelsen (Danish Emergency Management Agency/DEMA). 2004. National Sårbarhedsudredning. Udvalget for National Sårbarhedsudredning. Sekretariatet for National Sårbarhedsudredning.
Beredskabsstyrelsen (Danish Emergency Management Agency/DEMA). Development Unit. 2000. Management of the Hurricane of 3-4 December 1999 and the Storm of 17 December 1999: Cross-body evaluation and report of experience.
Danish Ministry of Defense (Forsvarsministeriet). 2007. Agreement on the Danish Emergency Preparedness After 2006 (April 24, 2007).
European Commission. European Task Force. 2001. Accident Of The Oil Tanker “Baltic Carrier” Off The Danish Coastline Final Report European Task Force In Denmark From 1st To 5 April, 2001. Prepared by Gilles Vincent, (European Commission) Bernard Le Guen (Cedre, France), France Stéphane Le Floch (Cedre, France).
Government of Denmark. 2005. Et robust og sikkert samfund - Regeringens politik på beredskabsområdet (A Robust and Secure Society - The Government Policy for the Danish Emergency Management).
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Norway
Beredskabsstyrelsen (Danish Emergency Management Agency/DEMA). 2008. Brand på Oslo Sentralstasjon: Information.
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Directorate for Civil Protection and Emergency Planning (DSB). Nasjonal sårbarhetsog beredskapsrapport (NSBR) 2009.
Directorate for Civil Protection and Emergency Planning (DSB). Nasjonal sårbarhets- og beredskapsrapport (NSBR) 2008.
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Hovden, Jan. 2004. Coping With Vulnerabilities of the Modern Society. Security Policy Library 5-2004. Den Norske Atlanterhavkomité.
Ministry of Justice and Police. 2002. The Norwegian Search and Rescue Service. p. 3
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Commission for the Protection of Critical Infrastructure. 2006. Protection of critical infrastructures and critical societal functions in Norway Report NOU 2006:6 submitted to the Ministry of Justice and the Police by the government appointed commission for the protection of critical infrastructure on 5th of April 2006. English Summary 1st of July 2006
Sweden
Regeringens proposition 2007/08:92. 2008. Stärkt Krisberedskap - för säkerhets skull.
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Swedish Commission on Climate and Vulnerability. 2007. Sweden facing climate change – threats and opportunities (SOU 2007:60). Final report from the Swedish Commission on Climate and Vulnerability
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Swedish Energy Agency (SEA). Storm Per: Lessons for a more secure energy supply after the second severe storm in the 21st century.
Swedish Institute. 2009. Sweden in Brief. http://www.sweden.se/eng/home/Quick-facts/Sweden-in-brief
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