4
Requirements by cluster (million $) PEOPLE TARGETED AND REACHED 185 178 117 81 79 46 45 20 15 11 8 3 ETC CCCM Coordination Nutrition Logistics Protection/GBV/CP Education Health WASH Early Recovery/Livelihood Shelter Food Security & Agriculture KEY FIGURES Displaced - Inside/Outside Sites* 4 million total displaced inside and outside evacuation sites Damaged Houses 1 million partially and completely damaged houses 51% 49% totally damaged partially damaged inside ECs 2% outside ECs Funding requested $ 788 million 47% funded 32% Private(ind & org) 11% United States 11% United Kingdom 7% CERF 7% Japan 5% Australia Top 5 Donors $ 367 million Displaced 4 million total displaced inside and outside evacuation sites Affected Population 14 million people affected by Typhoon Haiyan 5.8 3.8 3.8 0.5 0.1 XIII IVB VIII VI VII million 0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 0.2 2.4 1.5 0.01 0 XIII IVB VIII VI VII million FUNDING SITUATION OVERVIEW More than one hundred days after Typhoon Haiyan made landfall in the Philippines on 8 November, the Government-led relief operation has made marked progress. But millions of people still require urgent assistance to rebuild their lives and livelihoods and to ensure that the gains made possible by generous donor support are not rolled back as devastated communities begin the difficult process of recovery. The pace of progress thus far is remarkable given the massive scope of destruction. The typhoon affected 14 million people, destroyed or severely damaged more than a million homes and wiped out or otherwise impaired millions of people’s livelihoods. Thousands of Filipinos perished (the bodies of 6,201 deceased have been recovered, while remains are still being found during debris clearance). The Humanitarian community continue to support the authorities’ efforts to help survivors find closure. *based on Government report as of December 2013 1 Creation date: 07 March 2014 Feedback: [email protected] www.unocha.org www.reliefweb.int http://philippines.humanitarianresponse.info Sources: 1. OCHA Financial Tracking Service (FTS), 2. Typhoon Haiyan Strategic Response Plan (SRP), 3. Periodic Monitoring Report (PMR), 3. Cluster briefs 4. Philippine Government Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Humanitarian Dashboard (as of 07 March 2014) Funded Unmet million $ million $ 105 80 46 132 22 95 57 24 41 38 26 20 21 24 22 0 13 2 5 6 3 5 2 1 Reached Target 4.6M 5.6M 86,000 500,000* 47,700 260,000 1.2 M 1.5M 383,000 550,000 9,646 12,415 80,000*** 143,000*** 1.56 M 6.2 M 56(sites) 56(sites) *with durable roofing solutions ***blanket supplementary feeding +participants trained on protection including child-protection and gender-based violence Food Security & Agriculture Shelter Early Recovery/Livelihood WASH Health Education Protection/GBV/CP Nutrition CCCM +

SITUATION OVERVIEW KEY FIGURES FUNDING

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Requirements by cluster (million $)PEOPLE TARGETED AND REACHED

185

178

117

81

79

46

45

20

15

11

8

3ETC

CCCM

Coordination

Nutrition

Logistics

Protection/GBV/CP

Education

Health

WASH

Early Recovery/Livelihood

Shelter

Food Security & Agriculture

KEY FIGURES

Displaced - Inside/Outside Sites*

4 milliontotal displaced inside and outside evacuation sites

Damaged Houses

1 millionpartially and completely damaged houses

51%49%

totally damagedpartially

damaged

inside ECs

2%

outside ECs

Funding requested

$ 788 million

47%funded

32%Private(ind & org)

11%United States

11%United Kingdom

7%CERF

7%Japan

5%Australia

Top 5 Donors

$ 367 million

Displaced

4 milliontotal displaced inside and outside evacuation sites

Affected Population

14 millionpeople affected by Typhoon Haiyan

5.83.8 3.8

0.5 0.1XIIIIVBVIIIVIVII

million

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

0.2

2.41.5

0.01 0XIIIIVBVIIIVIVII

million

FUNDING

SITUATION OVERVIEWMore than one hundred days after Typhoon Haiyan made landfall in the Philippines on 8 November, the Government-led relief operation has made marked progress. But millions of people still require urgent assistance to rebuild their lives and livelihoods and to ensure that the gains made possible by generous donor support are not rolled back as devastated communities begin the difficult process of recovery.

The pace of progress thus far is remarkable given the massive scope of destruction. The typhoon affected 14 million people, destroyed or severely damaged more than a million homes and wiped out or otherwise impaired millions of people’s livelihoods. Thousands of Filipinos perished (the bodies of 6,201 deceased have been recovered, while remains are still being found during debris clearance). The Humanitarian community continue to support the authorities’ efforts to help survivors find closure.

*based on Government report as of December 2013

1Creation date: 07 March 2014 Feedback: [email protected] www.unocha.org www.reliefweb.int http://philippines.humanitarianresponse.info Sources: 1. OCHA Financial Tracking Service (FTS), 2. Typhoon Haiyan Strategic Response Plan (SRP), 3. Periodic Monitoring Report (PMR), 3. Cluster briefs 4. Philippine Government

Country name: Humanitarian Dashboard (as of XX Mmm YYYY)Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Humanitarian Dashboard (as of 07 March 2014)

Funded Unmet million $ million $

105 80

46 132

22 95

57 24

41 38

26 20

21 24

22 0

13 2

5 6

3 5

2 1

Reached Target

4.6M 5.6M

86,000 500,000*

47,700 260,000

1.2 M 1.5M

383,000 550,000

9,646 12,415

80,000*** 143,000***

1.56 M 6.2 M

56(sites) 56(sites)

*with durable roofing solutions***blanket supplementary feeding+participants trained on protection including child-protection and gender-based violence

Food Security & Agriculture

Shelter

Early Recovery/Livelihood

WASH

Health

Education

Protection/GBV/CP

Nutrition

CCCM

+

● Interventions for the support and promotion of optimal infant and young child feeding.

● Preventing micronutrient deficiencies for 100,000 boys and girls

Prevent boys and girls from suffereing from severe acute malnutrition

● A more comprehenisve screening of all children aged 6-59 months; Referals to malnutrition treatment sites is ongoing.

● Some 40 per cent of children with SAM were admitted for treatment.

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]***blanket supplementary feeding

80,000people reached***

56%reached / targeted

143,000 people targeted

NUTRITION

● Need to scale up support to livelihoods in the agriculture and fisheries sectors.

● Funding to provide alternative livelihoods for coconut farmer families.

Ensuring the immediate provision of food relief to save lives and maintain health.

● 4.6 million reached with food assistance, including nutrition activieies and cash transfers

● Concerted effortes to secure the current rice-planting season

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

4.6 millionpeople reached

93%reached / targeted

5.6 million people targeted

FOOD SECURITY AND AGRICULTURE

● To date there are 56 displacement sites remaining with 3,890 families (17,099 individuals) across Regions VI, VII and VIII as identified by the Displacement Tracking Matrix (DTM) (17Feb2014).

● Majority of these displaced families (71 per cent) still remain in Evacuation Centres(ECs), tent cities, and spontaneous settlements.

● The search for more transitional sites are a priority as the current number of transitional sites are insufficient for families awaiting identification of adequate, suitable and sustainable land options.

Camp management support to displacement sites.

● Training to local site managers for effective and coordinated delivery of services.

● Facilitating discussion on adequate implementation and use of bunkhouses.

● Assessing bunkhouses to identify gaps and required upgrades.

● Facilitating the transfer of IDPs to bunkhouses in Tacloban, Ormoc, Guiuan and Roxas.

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

Typhoon-affected people meet their immediate food needs, avoid nutritional deterioration, and build food security in ways that are sustained through stimulation of markets and production and access to life saving community-based nutrition services.

Families with destroyed or damaged homes, inlcuding the displaced population, attain protective and sustainable shelter solutions.

Women and men whose lielihoods or employment have been lost or severely impaired regain self-sufficiency, primarily with the restauration of local economies, agriculture and fisheries.

Prevent increases in mortality and morbidity and the outbreak of communicable diseases through immediate access to basic water, sanitation, hygiene and health services.

Affected people quickly regain access to community and local government services, including basic education and a strengthened protective environment.

56sites reached

100%reached / targeted

56 sites targeted

CAMP COORDINATION AND CAMP MANAGEMENT

1

2

3

4

Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Humanitarian Dashboard (as of 07 March 2014)

STRATEGIC OBJECTIVES OF THE RESPONSE PLAN

5

2Creation date: 07 March 2014 Feedback: [email protected] www.unocha.org www.reliefweb.int http://philippines.humanitarianresponse.info Sources: 1. OCHA Financial Tracking Service (FTS), 2. Typhoon Haiyan Strategic Response Plan (SRP), 3. Periodic Monitoring Report (PMR), 3. Cluster briefs 4. Philippine Government

● Need to strengthen inter-agency protection mechanisms at regional and provincial levels.

● Psychosocial Distress Provision of Psychosocial Services to children affected by Typhoon Haiyan/Yolanda disaster.

● Most local services remain severely disrupted and reliable GBV services are still being established.

Ensuring fair and equal distribution of resources and relocation opportunities and prioritizing the most vulnerable

● Monitoring ongoing relocations to ensure movement is voluntary, safe, free, informed and dignified.

● Establish community child-friendly spaces and access to safe areas for children and youth.

● Improvement of referal pathways for GBV survivors.

● Training of female police officers in women´s and children´s protection.

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]+participants trained on protection including child-protection and gender-based violence

9,646people reached

78%reached / targeted

12,415 people targeted

PROTECTION

● Tools and good quality construction materials, particularly roofing materials.

● Hands-on training and assistance to facilitate a “build back safer” approach which will reduce disaster risk and increase resilience.

Priorities steadily shifting from life-saving emergency shelter assistance towards support for self-recovery

● Provided close to 540,000 households (2.75 million people) with emergency shelter and NFIs including blankets, mats, and kitchen sets.

● More than 86,000 households (400,000 people) have received tools, materials, and training so they can “build back safer”.

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]*with durable roofing solutions

86,796households reached

17%reached / targeted

500,000 households targeted*

SHELTER

● Essential healthcare needs, including maternal and neonatal interventions, vaccination, mental health, continuity of communicable, non-communicable and disability care, and occupational health and safety.

● Strengthening of surveillance and outbreak prevention and response, vector control activities, diagnostic services, hospital waste management, cold-chain, pharmaceutical and logistics support, and partners coordination.

Further commitment from partners for provision of healthy environments and access to healthcare services appropriate to community needs.

● 151 foreign medical teams (12 current), in addition to private and public health sectors, provided free healthcare services.

● Provision by Health Cluster partners of a coordinated effort in disease surveillance and response, vector control, mental health care, maternal and neonatal health and capacity building of the local health workforce.

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

1.56 millionpeople with good to fair

access reached

34%fair to good access reached

6.2 million people targeted with access to health services

HEALTH

● Tracking children’s attendance across all-affected areas – including the most remote – is both a challenge and priority.

● Better analysis on the reasons why some children have still not returned to school to tailor interventions and improve access to education.

● Scale up of trainings to teaching and education personnel including psychosocial support to both teachers and children, including those not attending schools.

Ensure children in areas affected by Typhoon Haiyan/Yolanda return to learning.

● Strengthen the resilience of the education system as a whole to disasters in the future.

● Intersectoral approach to ensure a safe and healthy learning environment.

● Finalized recommendations for appropriate resilient designs for establishing make-shift classrooms and repair as part of temporary learning spaces.

● Provide teacher training on Disaster Risk Reduction (DRR), Education in Emergencies and Psychosocial Support (PSS)

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

383,785people reached

70%reached / targeted

550,000 people targeted

EDUCATION

Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Humanitarian Dashboard (as of 07 March 2014)

+

3Creation date: 07 March 2014 Feedback: [email protected] www.unocha.org www.reliefweb.int http://philippines.humanitarianresponse.info Sources: 1. OCHA Financial Tracking Service (FTS), 2. Typhoon Haiyan Strategic Response Plan (SRP), 3. Periodic Monitoring Report (PMR), 3. Cluster briefs 4. Philippine Government

● Emergency employment, social protection benefits and protective equipment on the worksite.

● The gradual shift to supporting the rehabilitation and construction of affected public and economic infrastructure as well as skills training and enterprise.

Help affected individuals return to normalcy by providing livelihoods, through immediate-short term employment.

● The identification of potential small and urgently needed infrastructure repairs.

● Assessments and analysis of skills needed for shelter and coco-lumber processing, and livelihoods using local resource-based approaches needed in the recovery phase.

Needs Response

For more information, contact: [email protected]

47,786people reached

18%reached / targeted

260,000 people targeted

EARLY RECOVERY and LIVELIHOOD

Philippines: Typhoon Haiyan Humanitarian Dashboard (as of 07 March 2014)

Typhoon Haiyan Strategic Response Plan Geographical Coverage

● Only 18% of achieved targets in sanitation.

● Provision of sanitation facilities in temporary shelter and household levels.

● Sustained hygiene promotion interventions to effect positive behavior change.

Rehabilitating water and sanitation facilities

● An Early Recovery Sanitation Strategy currently being developed by the cluster.

● Collaboration with the Shelter Cluster to ensure that shelter activities are paired with sanitation support.

● Advocacy campaign to be launched in support of the government’s call for Zero-Open Defacation at the barangay level.

● WASH in schools and health care facilities restoration and impovement.

Needs Response

For more information, contact: washccph@@gmail.org

1.2 millionpeople reached

80%reached / targeted

1.5 million people targeted

WATER, SANITATION AND HYGIENE

Legend

Areas reported in PMR (SRP & Non-SRP)

Government Priority Areas

EasternSamar

Samar

Leyte

Masbate

Biliran

Cebu

Bohol

NegrosOccidental

Palawan

Iloilo

Capiz

Aklan

Sorsogon

Coordination Hubs

GuiuanTacloban

Ormoc

Roxas

Cebu

4Creation date: 07 March 2014 Feedback: [email protected] www.unocha.org www.reliefweb.int http://philippines.humanitarianresponse.info Sources: 1. OCHA Financial Tracking Service (FTS), 2. Typhoon Haiyan Strategic Response Plan (SRP), 3. Periodic Monitoring Report (PMR), 3. Cluster briefs 4. Philippine Government