Publication:
Transportation and Supply Chain Resilience in the United Republic of Tanzania: Assessing the Supply-Chain Impacts of Disaster-Induced Transportation Disruptions

dc.contributor.author Colon, Celian
dc.contributor.author Hallegatte, Stephane
dc.contributor.author Rozenberg, Julie
dc.date.accessioned 2019-06-19T20:17:52Z
dc.date.available 2019-06-19T20:17:52Z
dc.date.issued 2019-06
dc.description.abstract The economy of the United Republic of Tanzania is growing fast but remains vulnerable to disasters, which are likely to worsen with climate change. Its transportation system, which mainly consist of roads, often get disrupted by floods. How could the resilience of the transportation infrastructures be improved? We formulate a new type of model, called DisruptSCT, which brings together the strength of two different approaches: network criticality analyses and input–output models. Using a variety of data, we spatially disaggregate production, consumption, and input–output relationships. Plugged into a dynamic agent-based model, these downscaled data allow us to simulate the disruption of transportation infrastructures, their direct impacts on firms, and how these impacts propagate along supply chains and lead to losses to households. These indirect losses generally affect people that are not directly hit by disasters. Their intensity nonlinearly increases with the duration of the initial disruption. Supply chains generate interdependencies that amplify disruptions for nonprimary products, such as processed food and manufacturing products. We identify bottlenecks in the network. But their criticality depends on the supply chain we are looking at. For instance, some infrastructures are critical to some agents, say international buyers, but of little use to others. Investment priorities vary with policy objectives, e.g., support health services, improve food security, promote trade competitiveness. Resilience-enhancing strategies can act on the supply side of transportation, by improving the quality of targeted infrastructure, developing alternative corridors, building capacity to accelerate post-disaster recovery. On the other hand, policies could also support coping mechanisms within supply chains, such as sourcing and inventory strategies. Our results help articulate these different policies and adapt them to specific contexts. en
dc.identifier http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/203311560795432285/Transportation-and-Supply-Chain-Resilience-in-the-United-Republic-of-Tanzania
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10986/31909
dc.language English
dc.publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
dc.relation.ispartofseries Background paper for Lifelines;
dc.rights CC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holder World Bank
dc.rights.uri http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo
dc.subject LIFELINES
dc.subject TRANSPORTATION
dc.subject SUPPLY CHAIN
dc.subject TRANSPORTATION NETWORK
dc.subject TRANSPORTATION INFRASTRUCTURE
dc.subject NATURAL DISASTER
dc.subject DISASTER RISK MANAGEMENT
dc.subject RESILIENT INFRASTRUCTURE
dc.subject DYNAMIC MODEL
dc.subject INTERNATIONAL TRADE
dc.subject INPUT-OUTPUT TABLES
dc.subject RESILIENCE STRATEGY
dc.title Transportation and Supply Chain Resilience in the United Republic of Tanzania en
dc.title.subtitle Assessing the Supply-Chain Impacts of Disaster-Induced Transportation Disruptions en
dc.type Report en
dc.type Rapport fr
dc.type Informe es
dspace.entity.type Publication
okr.associatedcontent https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/31805 Lifelines main publication en
okr.crossref.title Transportation and Supply Chain Resilience in the United Republic of Tanzania
okr.date.disclosure 2019-06-19
okr.doctype Economic & Sector Work
okr.doctype Economic & Sector Work :: Other Infrastructure Study
okr.docurl http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/203311560795432285/Transportation-and-Supply-Chain-Resilience-in-the-United-Republic-of-Tanzania
okr.identifier.doi 10.1596/31909
okr.identifier.externaldocumentum 090224b086dc525a_1_0
okr.identifier.internaldocumentum 31166799
okr.identifier.report 137916
okr.imported true en
okr.language.supported en
okr.pdfurl http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/203311560795432285/pdf/Transportation-and-Supply-Chain-Resilience-in-the-United-Republic-of-Tanzania.pdf en
okr.region.administrative Africa
okr.region.country Tanzania
okr.topic Transport :: Transport Economics Policy and Planning
okr.topic Environment :: Climate Change and Environment
okr.topic Environment :: Natural Disasters
okr.topic Infrastructure Economics and Finance :: Infrastructure Economics
okr.topic International Economics and Trade :: Trade and Transport
okr.unit Climate Change-D1-GFDRR-IBRD (GFDRR)
relation.isAuthorOfPublication 2fea2b63-4a74-5fbd-b964-71ef895df009
relation.isAuthorOfPublication ef7c7b61-a9b3-579e-b957-0461412ced50
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