Abstract
                                                                        UN World Conference on Disaster Risk Reduction held in 2015 at Sendai, Japan, reiterated the need  for substantial reduction in loss of life and property. Thus, assessing disaster risk and identifying key items  for risk mitigation are in focus. Assessment of disaster risk is a multidisciplinary effort, which includes  expected tangible physical loss, such as collapse and damage to built environment. In countries with limited  resources, prioritizing risk reduction effort across the different parts of the country needs a quantitative (yet  simple) approach to bring objectivity into the decision-making process.  This paper presents a simple method, called Earthquake Disaster Risk Index (EDRI), for estimating  relative earthquake risk across the different regions in a country; it uses three major constituents of risk,  namely Hazard, Exposure and Vulnerability. Hazard is taken as the acceleration hazard specified in the  national earthquake design standard, Exposure as per the permitted occupancy in the Local Municipal Byelaws, and Vulnerability through a Level 2 Detailed Qualitative Assessment of buildings built in the Town or  City (with penalty points for missing features of earthquake resistance compared to an Ideal Building). First,  the EDRI of a Town or City is estimated for each typology of building in the Town or City, and then the net  EDRI of the Town or City is obtained as a weighted average of the EDRI of each typology of buildings using  the number of buildings of each typology present in the city.  The EDRI of a city so estimated can be compared with that of another city. Also, disaggregation of  risk through its three major constituents of EDRI will increase awareness of the factors which contribute to  risk – from expected intensity of earthquake ground shaking, to exposure of people in each building type, to  vulnerability of each building typology. The exercise can be undertaken at a large scale across the country.  Policy Makers of a prefecture or a state in a nation will find the results of EDRI to be a useful tool for  prioritising allocation of earthquake risk mitigation resources and effort across Towns and Cities.