• Asia

Asia-Pacific Technical Working Group on Anticipatory Action

The Asia-Pacific region

The Asia-Pacific region is one of the most diverse in the world. It’s home to nearly 4.5 billion people – some 60 per cent of the global population – with roughly 2,300 languages and dialects between them. Its geography reflects this diversity, from the high plateaus of Afghanistan to the tropical islands of Fiji and the wide-open grasslands of the Mongolian steppe.

The region is also one of the most hazard-prone: some 70 per cent of the world’s disasters occur here. And they hit particularly hard for families with limited resources, who often belong to minority groups, living in remote areas or on the fringes of cities. For them, the unending cycle of cyclones, floods, droughts and heat waves can be relentless.These hazards are also getting more frequent and intense, thanks to climate change.

The impacts of conflict and economic problems can be equally taxing, especially if these coincide with hazards. It’s no coincidence that some of the most hazard-prone communities in the region are also among the world’s poorest, as crisis after crisis strips away at the hard-earned assets of families who have limited means to protect themselves and limited time to recover between shocks.

Anticipatory action in the Asia-Pacific region

While we may not entirely prevent disasters from happening, we can minimize the consequences by acting early. Anticipatory action is an approach that combines impact-based forecasting, anticipatory (or early) actions, ex-ante financing, and efforts to strengthen countries' operational capacity to implement actions ahead of a hazard. It has been widely accepted and adopted by humanitarian partners and governments in the region as a way to better protect people's lives and livelihoods, and to maintain their self-reliance.

By using better forecasting models, pre-positioning resources and mapping the most vulnerable groups, anticipatory action has the potential to prevent people from falling further into destitution and sustain development gains. Consider, for example, a family’s ability to keep their children in school with the income they derive from the livestock they were able to protect through anticipatory action, or how a community can maintain a basic level of nutrition, even in challenging times. In short, by being a timely form of disaster risk management, anticipatory action reduces losses and suffering, and protects progress.

As interest in anticipatory action grows in the Asia-Pacific, so does the need for information-sharing, coordination and joint advocacy. There is currently a gap in terms of regional partnerships convening the humanitarian, development and climate-resilience communities, and a need to draw on evidence and best practice to drive and unify standards, while also increasing investment. The Asia-Pacific Technical Working Group on Anticipatory Action aims to address this gap and promote a regional approach to knowledge-sharing and cooperation.

Publications

Anticipatory Action Simulation Exercise Toolkit and Facilitator Manual

The Anticipatory Action Simulation Exercise Toolkit and Facilitator Manual provides practical guidance for planning, executing, and evaluating simulation exercises to test and strengthen anticipatory action systems.

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Anticipatory action in Asia and the Pacific: results of the 2024 regional mapping

This report presents the findings from the 2024 mapping exercise to track the progression of anticipatory action in Asia and the Pacific, conducted by the Asia-Pacific Technical Working Group on Anticipatory Action.

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Anticipatory action in Asia and the Pacific: results of the 2023 regional mapping

This report presents the findings from a regional mapping exercise of anticipatory action in the Asia-Pacific region in 2023, done by the Asia-Pacific Technical Working Group on Anticipatory Action.

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Technical Standards on Anticipatory Action in Asia and the Pacific

As anticipatory action gains momentum in Asia-Pacific, there is a growing demand for coherent terminology and approaches for building an anticipatory action system. Recognizing this need, the Asia-Pacific Technical Working Group on Anticipatory …

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Anticipatory Action in Asia and the Pacific: Regional Roadmap 2023–2027

This document presents the five-year vision and roadmap for anticipatory action prepared by the Asia-Pacific Technical Working Group on Anticipatory Action (TWGAA), covering the period 2023–2027. The vision and roadmap build on the TWGAA’s Technical …

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Anticipatory action and cash transfers for slow-onset hazards: Practitioners’ note for field testing

Asia and the Pacific is starting to grapple with an increasing number of slow-onset hazard crises. This paper unpacks what cash means for slow-onset AA and how it differs from cash for rapid-onset AA, develops guidance cash transfer values and …

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Anticipatory action and cash transfers for rapid-onset hazards: Practitioners’ note for field testing

This paper, by the Asia-Pacific Regional Cash Working Group and the Asia-Pacific Technical Working Group on Anticipatory Action, aims to understand cash's relationship with anticipatory action and provide initial answers, recognizing that more …

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Anticipatory Action Framework for Tropical Cyclones in Fiji: Multi-stakeholder Evaluation Protocol

This document outlines the design and data collection approaches for a proposed evaluation of the Fiji Multi-sectoral Tropical Cyclone Anticipatory Action Framework, in the event of the activation of the framework. The evaluation is commissioned and …

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Minimum training package on anticipatory action

Based on the needs identified in the Asia-Pacific Dialogue Platform on Anticipatory Action (in Bangkok, November 2022), the Regional TWG-AA supported the development of a minimum training package on AA that can be used collectively (or by any single agency), at the country level, with a common and harmonized messaging. This training package aims to capacitate national and local actors to intervene in anticipation of extreme events and support the institutionalization of the approach. It was first introduced at the regional ToT in Bangkok, in April 2024, with representatives from 12 countries that are actively engaged in applying the approach as part of their DRM efforts. The training package was then updated and used in a new regional ToT organised with the AHA Centre in Bali, in October 2025, with representatives from the 11 ASEAN member states.

Find the Trainer Facilitation Guide and the modules below.

Anticipatory Action: Trainer Facilitation Guide for Asia Region

Map of current anticipatory action programmes in Asia Pacific


Find more information about the programmes on the global map.


Contacts

Raymond Zingg

Regional Anticipatory Action Coordinator

IFRC Asia Pacific Regional Office

Catherine Jones

Anticipatory Action Lead for Asia-Pacific

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)