Elaine Weidman-Grunewald

Data that enables rapid response

The massive growth of mobile networks in the past decade has prompted suggestions about how phone data could be used to inform the humanitarian community about the locations of affected people during a crisis. Today, there are close to 8 billion mobile subscriptions worldwide, making a subscription more common than access to a toothbrush or a toilet in many parts of the world. In light of this, call data records are a crucial source of information.
Exploring the options
Mobility data can provide real-time information about how and where populations are moving, and explorations are taking place around how these insights can be used for humanitarian purposes. In the same way we use data to estimate and improve traffic congestion, we should be able, for example, to predict where a disease might spread, to pinpoint exactly where aid should be delivered and to show where people are trapped in an earthquake.
To make access to these basic data points a reality, more support is needed from the private sector to enable government and industry efforts to find ways to address regulatory barriers – for example by anonymizing data. The GSMA’s Humanitarian Connectivity Charter is one initiative in this vein. At the same time, a more dedicated effort is required among governments and other stakeholders to explore ways to ease restrictions in the midst of a disaster, without compromising individual rights such as privacy.

A woman makes a phone call after an earthquake in Ussita, Italy, 2016.
Analytics, automation and the Internet of Things
Mobility and connectivity are just the starting points for improved humanitarian response. Analytics and automation are enabling a variety of services that will transform the humanitarian landscape in the years to come, by making disaster information quickly available to responders, improving collaboration among relief organizations, promoting faster and more proactive responses and providing better visibility of how aid is allocated and spent. And then there is the internet of things. With sensors connected to IoT platforms in disaster-prone areas, we will be able, for example, to predict storms and changing weather patterns with greater accuracy, and provide alerts sooner.
The possibilities are seemingly endless. Having a well-considered digitalization strategy will help humanitarian organizations improve their operations and response times, making it possible for them to do what is vital and save more lives.
There is a big role for the private sector to play in this. In our work with the World Food Programme, the Red Cross and many other organizations, we can see that, just as digitalization is occuring across many major industries, there needs to be a global strategy for digitalizing the humanitarian sector. The first organizations to realize this will be the first to capitalize on the benefits.
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