Rift volcanism: past, present and future

Lead Research Organisation: British Geological Survey
Department Name: Earth Hazards & Observatories

Abstract

Early explorers called it Africa's Great Rift Valley, a narrow strip that runs for thousands of kilometres from Djibouti to Mozambique and is perhaps most famous for the vast herds of the Serengeti, mountain gorillas and dramatic landscapes of high peaks and fertile plains. The mountains and valleys are the signs of a continent slowly tearing apart. Moving apart more slowly than your finger nails grow, the African continent will one day split into two, creating a new ocean. As the Earth's crust stretches and thins - like plasticine when you pull it - rocks melt, and the resulting magma rises to the surface. The resultant eruptions have had a dramatic and varied impact on the landscape: great lakes have filled the holes left by enormous eruptions; eruptions of volcanic glass have created a chain of peaks, and wide fields are filled with scattered cones and lava flows. This volcanic landscape is hazardous - a recent report for the World Bank ranked 49 of Ethiopia's 65 volcanoes in the highest category of hazard uncertainty. The high temperatures associated with magma in the Rift Valley make it a rich source of carbon-neutral geothermal power. Multi-billion dollar investments by development agencies are driving a ten-fold expansion in the geothermal infrastructure in East Africa over the next decade.
However, the majority of scientific research has focussed on volcanoes in other tectonic settings, such as Hawaii and Japan, leaving the volcanoes of the East African Rift largely a mystery. For many of them, we can't even say when the last eruption look place and there is no monitoring equipment to detect the early stages of an upcoming eruption. The eruption of Nabro volcano in 2011 was a timely reminder of the potential threats. Situated on the frontier between Ethiopia and Eritrea, the area is remote and sparsely populated, yet the eruption caused 32 fatalities, displaced >5000 people and disrupted regional aviation. Had this eruption originated from one of other 29 volcanoes with the same perceived hazard, but in densely-populated central Ethiopia, the humanitarian and societal cost would have been considerable.
RiftVolc will focus on the volcanoes of the Main Ethiopian Rift in central Ethiopia. The aim is to understand their past behaviour, look for subtle signs of present-day activity and assess the threat posed to the infrastructure and people on and around them. RiftVolc will involve scientists from many disciplines working together to produce an integrated view of the past, present and future of the volcanoes in this region and compare it to other parts of East Africa and volcanoes elsewhere. Together we will spend several months out in Ethiopia, collecting samples, mapping the geology and deploying geophysical instruments, before returning to the lab to use analyse the data and create computer models of the results. Petrologists and geochemists will look at the lavas and ash to figure out the timing, size and style of past eruptions. Geophysicists will look for tiny earthquakes, changes in gravity, the passage of electrical currents and movements of the Earth's surface to understand the plumbing system feeding the volcanoes today. Finally, experts in hazard assessment will model possible scenarios and create a long-range eruption forecast for Ethiopia. We will work with our colleagues in the University of Addis Ababa and the Geological Survey of Ethiopia to ensure our findings are appropriate communicated to the government, industry and people of Ethiopia and with international groups such as the Global Volcano Model to communicate our results to development agencies such as the UN and the World Bank.

Planned Impact

Beneficiaries
National Government (Devolved Government & Government Agencies)
- The Institute of Geophysics, Space Science and Astronomy (IGSSA) at Addis Ababa University is the national organisation providing geophysical monitoring data and advice during unrest and eruptions, and the School of Earth Sciences advises on the character of past eruptions. There are no trained volcanologists in Ethiopia so they collectively provide scientific advice to the Ministry of Agriculture's Disaster Risk Management and Food Security Sector (DRMFSS), the Civil Aviation Authority and Ethiopian Pilots Association during an eruption.
- The Geological Survey of Ethiopia's geoscience data, advice and services contributes to the sustainable development of the agricultural, industrial, infrastructure and other sectors of the Ethiopian economy.
International Organisations and Agencies.
- The IAVCEI Commission on Hazards and Risk links academic research to decision-makers, to reduce the impact of volcanic hazards.
- The Global Volcano Model (GVM) is an international network creating an information platform on volcanic hazard and risk, and is responsible for the volcano component of the biennial UN Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction.
Commercial Sector (Public and Private Geothermal Energy)
- Reykjavik Geothermal Limited develops high enthalpy geothermal resources and will construct Africa's largest (1 GW, $4billion) geothermal power plant in our study area.
- Ethiopian Electrical Power Corporation (EEPCO) currently operates a 7MW geothermal power station in our study area, which they are expanding to 70MW.

We will deliver benefit by:
National Government
- Assist Ethiopian scientific partners to build institutional capacity and a volcano monitoring strategy for observations of, and response to, future unrest and eruptions based on information on past eruptions, the processes driving current unrest, and priorities for potential impacts. Enable IGSSA to establish real-time seismic and geodetic monitoring.
- With in-country partners involved in science advice, monitoring, aviation, national and regional administration, and civil protection, ensure our research responds to the needs of all sectors, and make recommendations for the future.
- Research outputs and methodologies supporting effective decision-making under conditions of uncertainty will assist with policy development to strengthen the resilience of people and assets exposed to volcanic hazards. Deliver to local stakeholders advice and a legacy of tools that are practical for use in a developing, low technology nation to determine optimum mitigation and resilience strategies, supporting Ethiopia's national response to the Hyogo Framework for Action international policy for disaster risk reduction. Enable DRMFSS to incorporate volcanic hazards into the local disaster risk profiling exercise.
International Organisations and Agencies
- Through organisations such as the GVM and IAVCEI commission, disseminate our results, share experience and practice applicable in a developing nation, and consult over the development of methodologies to underpin future global-scale analyses of volcanic risk.
- Transfer knowledge and contribute to policy through interaction with the UK Cabinet Office Civil Contingencies Secretariat and input to the National Risk Register.
Commercial Sector
- Collaborate with Rekjavik Geothermal and EEPCO to exchange data that inform geothermal exploration and production, and incorporate hazard analyses specific to rift volcanism to mitigate against potential future economic losses resulting from volcanic activity.

Activities detailed in the Pathways to Impact document will improve monitoring for early warning, facilitate science into policy supporting planning to build resilience, contribute to global data sets and volcanic risk modelling, increase the resilience of industry to support economic development, and facilitate better communities.

Publications

10 25 50

 
Description In order to understand and quantify volcanic hazard, volcano scientists are faced with many questions around the occurrence frequency, size, style, vent location, potential areas that may be impacted and whether there will be any early warning signals. When there is low data availability from past eruptions or present day activity there are many uncertainties to handle for scientists to be able to answer these questions. Open source software has been developed to help explore similarities and differences between volcanic systems to help plug some of the data gaps (PyVOLCANS; Tierz et al., 2021).

'Background' probabilistic volcanic hazard assessment (PVHA) of pyroclastic density currents is feasible even at relatively data-scarce volcanoes (e.g. Aluto), provided that some primary volcanological knowledge is available for the volcanic system to inform and justify the physical and statistical modelling required for PVHA. Complementary data from analogue volcanoes may also be key. The VOLCano ANalogues Search method (VOLCANS) has been developed to identify from global datasets the volcanoes that are considered to share enough characteristics to be considered exchangeable. This is becoming a key component of volcanic hazard assessment and is particularly important for volcanoes where data are lacking or scarce. VOLCANS can be used to fill data gaps to enable quantitative volcanic hazard assessments to address key questions including what are the likelihoods, sizes and magnitudes of future volcanic eruptions from a volcano?

Event trees (Newhall and Hoblitt, 2002) can be very useful tools to quantify volcanic hazard at Ethiopian volcanoes. They can be used to model the significant epistemic uncertainty related to hazard assessment at data-scarce volcanoes, and are complementary to other methods to tackle data scarcity developed under the RiftVolc project (e.g. VOLCANS, Tierz et al., 2019).
Exploitation Route VOLCANS is an objective, structured and reproducible method to identify sets of analogue volcanoes, which could be very valuable in its application to volcanoes in the Main Ethiopian Rift (MER) as well as volcanoes in other geographic areas for which there is limited knowledge. Analogues help fill data gaps to enable assessment of volcanic hazards and is useful for scientists and practitioners in understanding likely impacts from volcanic activity. PyVOLCANS has been developed as open access software package to enable others to identify suitable volcano analogues.
Sectors Communities and Social Services/Policy,Education,Environment,Government, Democracy and Justice

 
Description Initial data on volcanic hazards in Ethiopia have been presented to the National Disaster Risk Management Commission and have been used to raise the awareness of the distribution of volcanoes in Ethiopia. As a result of the presentation, and following discussions, volcanic hazards will be included into a risk profiling project. A series of outreach activities were delivered in January 2019 at a rural school in near Iteya, in Central Ethiopian collaboration Amdemichael Zafu (Addis Ababa University) and Karen Fontijn (Université Libre de Bruxelles). Activities included: a series of three workshops, interactive activities with the children illustrating volcanic and rifting processes, and the painting of an educational mural showing a cross section of the Main Ethiopian Rift. As part of the RiftVolc Conference in Hawassa, Ethiopia, Pablo Tierz co-designed and co-led a field trip to introduce Ethiopian, UK, and international scientists to Aluto and Corbetti volcanoes. Richard Luckett from BGS has conducted two visits to Ethiopia to work with the Institute for Geoscience, Space Science and Astronomy (IGSSA) in Addis Ababa University to enable telemetry of real-time data from two RiftVolc seismometers in the Main Ethiopian Rift that have been donated to support capacity building of IGSSA. Raspberry Pis and openVPN have been purchased and installed for secure communication between seismic stations and IGSSA. This was developed alongside staff form IGSSA who are able to repeat the process as often as needed and other stations in the national network could be made real-time by the addition of Raspberry Pis in the near future. Training has been provided in SEISAN to analysts in IGSSA to enable incorporation of data from all seismic stations in Ethiopia for interpretation of the seismicity in Addis Ababa. Script has also been written to break up the data files to enable both archiving and data access by programs at IGSSA. BGS led a stakeholder mapping exercise in January 2019 in Addis Ababa with Addis Ababa University, the Geological Survey of Ethiopia, the Ethiopian Geospatial Information Agency (previously the Ethiopian Mapping Agency), the National Disaster Risk Management Commission, members of RiftVolc and the British Geological Survey to discuss multiple hazards and plan for the final RiftVolc stakeholder workshop to be scheduled in November 2019. On 6-7 November 2019 the British Geological Survey led a workshop for stakeholders in Addis Ababa on 'From Geohazard Risk to Action in Ethiopia'. The workshop was co-designed and delivered with RiftVolc collaborators including the Institute of Geophysics, Space Science and Astronomy (IGSSA) and the School of Earth Sciences (SES) of Addis Ababa University, the National Disaster Risk Management Commission (NDRMC), the Geological Survey of Ethiopia (GSE) and the British Geological Survey (BGS). It was attended by over 140 people representing ministries and commissions of the Ethiopian government, humanitarian and development organizations, the private sector, civil society, international organizations and academia. The NDRMC announced via media interviews that they a shifting from reactive crisis management to anticipation of geohazards. https://reliefweb.int/report/ethiopia/ndrmc-shifts-crisis-managing-geohazard-risks The Geological Survey of Ethiopia and BGS are together exploring how to characterise exposure to volcanic hazards for key volcanoes in Ethiopia that have high population densities in the immediately surrounding area.
First Year Of Impact 2016
Sector Education,Government, Democracy and Justice
Impact Types Societal,Policy & public services

 
Title Co-design eruption scenarios 
Description Co-design of explosive eruption scenarios with project partners has enabled ash fall hazard analysis for Corbetti and Aluto volcanoes to be carried out using the open source Tephra2 numerical model. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2018 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Outcomes of the modelling has been presented in the RiftVolc conference 2019 (see 'Engagement Activities') 
 
Title Expert elicitation methodology 
Description Developing and testing an expert elicitation methodology based on SHELF for dealing with low data environments. Held an expert elicitation on 26th April 2018 with RiftVolc partners and published by the British Geological Survey. 
Type Of Material Improvements to research infrastructure 
Year Produced 2018 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact The research method has enabled frequency-magnitude data to be produced that are being used on other research in work package 3 such as hazard modelling to look at the likelihood of different hazard footprints. 
 
Title Method for identifying analogue volcanoes 
Description Developed, alongside project partners, an objective, structured, reproducible method for identifying sets of analogue volcanoes, using global volcanological databases. The work was published in the journal Bulletin of Volcanology in December 2019. 
Type Of Material Computer model/algorithm 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact The work was published in the journal Bulletin of Volcanology in December 2019. Presentation of the methodology at Cities on Volcanoes conference in Naples resulted in an invitation to visit the Cascades Volcano Observatory. The method was also applied to parameterize an event tree model to quantify volcanic hazard at Aluto volcano, and to complement other data sources (e.g. volcano-specific data, expert elicitation) in the calculation of frequency-magnitude relationships for tens of Ethiopian volcanoes, in the context of a regional probabilistic hazard assessment for tephra fallout in Ethiopia. 
URL https://doi.org/10.1007/s00445-019-1336-3
 
Title PyVOLCANS 
Description PyVOLCANS (Python VOLCano ANalogues Search) is an open-source tool that addresses the need for an objective, data-driven method for selection of analogue volcanoes. It is based on the results of VOLCANS (Tierz et al., 2019), a first-of-its-kind method to quantify the analogy (or similarity) between volcanic systems, based on a structured combination of five volcanological criteria: tectonic setting, rock geochemistry, volcano morphology, eruption size, and eruption style. 
Type Of Material Data analysis technique 
Year Produced 2021 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact Applications have played a key role in developing quantitative hazard analyses for Ethiopian volcanoes, within the RiftVolc project. The future potential of VOLCANS/PyVOLCANS, particularly in the field of volcanic hazard assessment, has been recognised in recent relevant publications in the area (Marzocchi et al., 2021; Papale, 2021). 
URL https://github.com/BritishGeologicalSurvey/pyvolcans
 
Title Tepha data for the Younger Wendo Koshe Pumice 
Description Collated tephra thickness, grainsize and componentry data for the Younger Wendo Koshe Pumice, from Corbetti volcano from fieldwork and laboratory analyses. 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2018 
Provided To Others? No  
Impact Data and model reconstructing the eruption using these source term parameters was presented at the RiftVolc conference 2019 (see 'Engagement Activities') 
 
Title VOLCano ANalogues Search (VOLCANS) datasets used to parameterise the Aluto event tree model. 
Description The datasets contain volcanological data on analogue (i.e. similar) volcanoes of Aluto volcano (Ethiopia), including conditional probabilities of eruption size, number of eruptions with specific volcanic phenomena reported and values of volcano analogy calculated using the VOLCano ANalogues Search tool (VOLCANS, Tierz et al., 2019, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00445-019-1336-3). 
Type Of Material Database/Collection of data 
Year Produced 2020 
Provided To Others? Yes  
Impact These type of data can be used to parameterise event tree models (e.g. Newhall and Hoblitt, 2002, https://doi.org/10.1007/s004450100173; Marzocchi et al., 2010, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00445-010-0357-8) and, thus, quantify volcanic hazard at a particular volcano of interest, including the relevant sources of uncertainty and the method is being applied to other volcanoes in Ethiopia and elsewhere. 
URL https://doi.org/10.5285/f46c19aa-535f-4631-a032-60a2fc825a42
 
Description Cities on Volcanoes conference 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact Conference talk and poster given:
Tierz, P., Loughlin, S.C., Calder, E.S. (talk). How similar are unique volcanoes? Insights from global databases. In Cities on Volcanoes 10 (2018). Millennia of Stratification between Human Life and Volcanoes: strategies for coexistence, Napoli, Italy.

Tierz, P., Clarke, B., Calder, E.S., Lewi, E., Yirgu, G., Fontijn, K., Loughlin, S.C. (poster). Development of an event tree for eruptions at a peralkaline rhyolite caldera system: an example from Aluto volcano (Ethiopia). In Cities on Volcanoes 10 (2018). Millennia of Stratification between Human Life and Volcanoes: strategies for coexistence, Napoli, Italy.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
 
Description Ethiopia geo-hazards workshop 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Hosted by University of Addis Ababa, officially opened by Commissioner H.E. Mitiku Kassa of the National Disaster Risk management Commission (NDRMC).

Purpose - to discuss the current situation regarding geo-hazards in Ethiopia and pave possible ways for future actions. The opening speech highlighted the need to establish close links between relevant actors in order to adequately address national disasters and emplace workable plans of preparedness and responses. In addition, such plans help to avoid confusions and duplications of efforts and at the same time enable to realize effective utilization of limited national human and material resources. Such coordinated approaches are critically important not only during crisis periods, but they should be part of the day-to-day activities in the disaster preventions and risk mitigations schemes.

Attendees included Adama Science and Technology (ASTU), Addis Ababa Science and Technology (AASTU), Bahar-Dar (BDU), Geological Survey of Ethiopia (GSE), Ethiopian Roads Authority (ERA), National Disaster Risk Management Commission (NDRMC), Civil Works Construction Enterprise (CWCE), Ethio-Infra Engineering Consultant and STADIA Engineering Consultants. Plus five international research institutes, including, British Geological Survey (BGS), and Bristol, Leeds, Edinburgh and Oxford Universities.

Outcome: was the setting up a Geohazards Task Group to identify the roles and responsibilities of different institutions.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2017
 
Description Interview broadcast on Ethiopian National TV 
Form Of Engagement Activity A press release, press conference or response to a media enquiry/interview
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact National and local media attended the workshop BGS led in Addis Ababa on 'From Geohazard Risk to Action in Ethiopia'. Charlotte Vye-Brown provided interviews requested by various media alongside colleagues from Addis Ababa University and the National Disaster Risk Management Commission. One of these was an interview on Ethiopian National TV (ETV) that was broadcast that evening (6th November) in a 5 minute long slot. The coverage included a summary of the geohazards presented at the workshop, the extent to which they pose a risk in Ethiopia, the geographical spread of historic events, and the collaboration that the UK research community have had and are continuing to work on alongside researchers and practitioners in Ethiopia to better understand the character, risk, and potential impact that these events have had in the past and might have again in the future.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description RiftVolc conference 2019 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact The following presentations were made by the team:
Clarke, B., Calder, E., Fontijn, K., McNamara, K., Tierz, P. (poster). The style of pumice-cone-forming post-caldera eruptions: insights from the Ethiopian Rift. In RiftVolc final conference: Magmatic and Volcanic Processes in Volcanic Rifts, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
Crummy J.M., Marchant, B., Loughlin, S.C., Engwell, S., Tierz, P., Cuba, D.M. and Vye-Brown, C. Volcanic hazard analysis: dealing with uncertainty using elicitation, Oral presentation, RiftVolc conference 9-11 January 2019, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
Crummy, J.M. and Engwell, S. Reconstruction of the Wendo Koshe Younger Pumice eruption, Corbetti Volcano, Ethiopia, Poster presentation, RiftVolc conference 9-11 January 2019, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
Tierz, P., Loughlin, S.C., Calder, E.S. (talk). Using global databases to derive informative sets of analogue volcanoes for volcanic hazard assessment: examples from the Main Ethiopian Rift. In RiftVolc final conference: Magmatic and Volcanic Processes in Volcanic Rifts, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
Tierz, P., Clarke, B., Calder, E., Lewi, E., Yirgu, G., Fontijn, K., Loughlin, S.C. (poster). Conceptual and quantitative models of volcanic hazard at Aluto volcano: event-tree structures and their parameterization from multiple datasets. In RiftVolc final conference: Magmatic and Volcanic Processes in Volcanic Rifts, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
Vye-Brown, C., Medynski, S., Barfod, D., Millar, I., Pik, R. Fissure swarm volcanism in the Afar Depression (poster) RiftVolc conference 9-11 January 2019, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
Vye-Brown, C., Yirgu, G., Loughlin, S.C., Engwell, S. Holocene volcanism in Ethiopia (talk) RiftVolc conference 9-11 January 2019, Hawassa, Ethiopia.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
 
Description RiftVolc elicitation for Ethiopian volcanoes 
Form Of Engagement Activity A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact An expert elicitation was conducted to gain understanding and quantify uncertainty around frequency-magnitude distributions for Ethiopian volcanoes. These data will be used for a national scale ash fall hazard assessment for Ethiopia.
BGS (Julia Crummy, Charlotte Vye-Brown, Sue Loughlin, Ben Marchant and Kathryn Leeming) organised and ran the elicitation in collaboration with Yewub Bekele (Geological Survey of Ethiopia) and Dr Susanna Jenkins (Earth Observatory Singapore). Elicited experts were: Dr Gezahegn Yirgu (Geological Survey of Ethiopia); Yewub Bekele (Geological Survey of Ethiopia); Dr Susanna Jenkins (Earth Observatory Singapore); Prof David Pyle (University of Oxford); Dr Karen Fontijn (Université libre de Bruxelles), Dr Sam Engwell and Dr Pablo Tierz (British Geological Survey). The impact of the event was a stengthening of collaborations, capacity building with in-country partners; broadened understanding and awareness of potential future volcanic activity in Ethiopia, discussion of the use of expert elicitation as a tool to enable short-term hazard assessment in Ethiopia in the future. and communication of knowledge gaps on volcanic systems in Ethiopia to focus future efforts.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
 
Description RiftVolc meeting 2018 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Study participants or study members
Results and Impact Tierz, P., Clarke, B., Calder, E., Loughlin, S. (talk). Event trees for volcanic hazard assessment: the Aluto prototype. In RiftVolc Annual Meeting 2018, Edinburgh, UK.

Calder, E., Clarke, B., Tierz, P. (shared talk). Pyroclastic density current hazards at Aluto volcano. In RiftVolc Annual Meeting 2017, Ilam, UK.

Engwell, S.L., Fontijn, K., Zafu, A., Eruption Source Parameters: Corbetti Volcano, Presentation, Riftvolc Annual meeting 23-27th April, Edinburgh.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2018
 
Description Stakeholder workshop 'From Geohazard Risk to Action in Ethiopia' 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact On 6-7 November 2019 the British Geological Survey led a workshop for stakeholders in Addis Ababa on 'From Geohazard Risk to Action in Ethiopia'. The workshop was co-designed and delivered with RiftVolc collaborators including the Institute of Geophysics, Space Science and Astronomy (IGSSA) and the School of Earth Sciences (SES) of Addis Ababa University, the National Disaster Risk Management Commission (NDRMC), the Geological Survey of Ethiopia (GSE) and the British Geological Survey (BGS). It was attended by over 140 people representing ministries and commissions of the Ethiopian government, humanitarian and development organizations, the private sector, civil society, international organizations and academia. The event built on long-term collaboration and was a continuation of a series of collaborative science-led workshops starting with the Afar workshop in 2012 aiming to enhance geohazards risk management in Ethiopia, by carrying out fundamental science, enhancing monitoring networks and capacities, and building partnerships across sectors and disciplines to understand risk. These relate to SDGs 11 (sustainable cities and communities) and 17 (partnerships for the goals).

This international workshop aimed to enable discussion of knowledge around geohazards in Ethiopia to support and raise awareness of the need to reduce and manage risk from geohazards to both save lives and sustain growth in Ethiopia. The overall objective of the workshop was to create a space for people from different sectors and regions to come together to discuss geohazard risk and how this can be managed by joint action. There were several critical themes in the workshop that were mapped onto the following objectives:
1. Raise awareness of geohazards in Ethiopia and their potential impact on lives, livelihoods and development
2. Recognise Ethiopia's geohazard expertise for disaster risk management
3. Support local, regional and national response and action
4. Identify how geohazard and risk science can contribute to intitatives to save lives and sustain growth in Ethiopia
The event was designed with interactive and participatory methods to enable discussion among all participants.

Impact:
We made major progress in terms of raising awareness among stakeholders of the types, extents and impacts of geohazards in Ethiopia whilst considering both infrequent large magnitude as well as low-intensity geohazards. Importantly we created the platform for our Ethiopian colleagues to make the difference that is needed by providing science to support evidence-based decision-making in Ethiopia. The NDRMC announced via media interviews that they a shifting from reactive crisis management to anticipation of geohazards in response to the workshop. https://reliefweb.int/report/ethiopia/ndrmc-shifts-crisis-managing-geohazard-risks

Outcomes:
A report of the workshop has been produced and will be made available as a BGS Open File Report. In addition, the Addis Ababa Declaration on Geohazards is currently being drafted by the organising committee and will be circulated to all participants for agreement prior to publication.

There was significant media coverage of the workshop and much interest among stakeholders from all different sectors. The event was covered by ETV with interviews of Atalay Ayele of AAU, the NDRMC Deputy Commissioner and Charlotte Vye-Brown from BGS on behalf of RiftVolc. The event was covered on twitter (#GeoHazEthiopia) and had over 25,600 impressions and 455 interactions.

The event was co-funded by BGS ODA (NE/R000069/1) which enabled the event to cover earthquakes, landslides and ground fissuring as frequent geohazards impacting communities in Ethiopia in addition to the work that has been conducted by RiftVolc on volcanic hazards.

The outcomes include (i) creation of a multi-stakeholder forum to improve interaction between scientists, practitioners and policy makers in Ethiopia (ii) formation of a national repository to fill data gaps on geohazards and their impacts / a digital geohazard information centre (iii) fostering links within Ethiopia (iv) identifying lines of communication for emergency response, enquiries, and planning purposes (v) raising community awareness of geohazards.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://reliefweb.int/report/ethiopia/ndrmc-shifts-crisis-managing-geohazard-risks
 
Description The hazard component of volcanic risk: challenges and opportunities 
Form Of Engagement Activity Participation in an activity, workshop or similar
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Pablo Tierz was invited to give a talk as part of the colloquium: Understanding, predicting and controlling risks using statistics by La Société Française de Statistique (SFdS). Our society, and each of us individually, must face risks that occur every day and on very contrasting temporal and spatial scales: heat waves, droughts, floods, avalanches, cyclones, air and water pollution, earthquakes and landslides, fires, epidemics, diseases, food hazards, road accidents, terrorist attacks, to name a few... In the era of "big data", databases gathering observations of risk occurrences and potential risk factors are beginning to abound. Statistical techniques, and more particularly artificial intelligence, combined with the ever-increasing power of computers, provide an indispensable toolbox for transforming data into useful knowledge, with the aim of identifying predominant risk factors and model and predict their occurrences in a probabilistic framework. The day brought together risk experts and the interested public around a series of introductory and specialized presentations, and a round table discussion.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://youtu.be/W_kcGGQFHME
 
Description User needs discussions in Ethiopia 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Professional Practitioners
Results and Impact Several related presentations and a workshop were held with research collaborators and stakeholders in Ethiopia, including: Addis Ababa University, the Geological Survey of Ethiopia, and the National Disaster Risk Management Commission. The aim of this visit was to raise the awareness of volcanic hazards, share the results of recent research in the region, investigate how data on volcanic hazards could be involved existing work to characterise risk, identify a collaborative work plan, and understand user needs for volcanic hazard data. In total 60 people attended a presentation which generated a lot of questions, discussion and started plans for future work. In addition, dedicated side meetings identified ways in which volcanic hazard data could be used in Ethiopia.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2016