Weather-related disasters occur annually, displacing an average of 20 million people every year globally. The difference in 2020 was the new coronavirus. The emergence of SARS-CoV-2 — which paralyzed entire nations at the outset of cyclone and monsoon season in the Northern Hemisphere and along the equator — presented an unsettling and daunting obstacle to moving people to safety, ensuring their health, and helping them recover. Even in calm times, securing a coastal city before a tropical storm or fleeing from a wildfire can be chaotic and stressful. In a pandemic, the familiar playbook for responding to these emergencies is being rewritten. The humanitarian community’s standard procedures for evacuation, sheltering, and tendering care are being swiftly recalibrated to a period of physical distancing and limited mobility. |