Fund Resilience, Not Disasters: NDMD Rallies Nevis for IDDRR 2025

Written on 10/01/2025

Charlestown, Nevis—October 13, 2025. The Nevis Disaster Management Department (NDMD) joins the global community in observing the International Day for Disaster Risk Reduction (IDDRR) with a clear call to action: invest in resilience now to avoid paying far more for disasters later.

Disasters are becoming more frequent, costly, and devastating. While direct losses are estimated at US$202 billion annually, the Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction 2025 places the true bill near US$2.3 trillion—about 11× higher when wider economic and social impacts are counted. Yet national budgets and international assistance still underinvest in disaster risk reduction (DRR).

Why funding resilience matters

  • Disasters are eroding economic prosperity and sustainable development; current cost estimates are understated and unsustainable.
  • Mounting disaster bills drive higher debt, lower incomes, reduced insurability, and recurring humanitarian crises.
  • With declining international assistance, cutting DRR today guarantees bigger, pricier disasters tomorrow.
  • To curb losses, countries must increase DRR financing and ensure all development investments are risk-informed.

NDMD activities (IDDRR Commemoration)

  • Sun, 12 Oct — Worship Service, St. Paul’s Anglican Church, Charlestown.
  • Mon, 13 Oct — Launch of Communications Ambassadors & public awareness activation, Charlestown.
  • Tue, 14 Oct — Staff Development Day (readiness refreshers).
  • Wed, 15 Oct — Community Day: AT tours, birthday celebrations & BBQ (family-friendly engagement).
  • Fri 17 Oct — NEMA & NDMD Staff excursion
  • Sun, 19 Oct — Family Fun day @ Malcolm Guishard Park

Building on this momentum, NDMD continues year-round outreach, CERT recruitment, and parish-based readiness events, building resilience in each Community.

The UN General Assembly established IDDRR on October 13, mobilizing citizens and governments worldwide to build disaster-resilient communities and nations.