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Last updated 30 Nov 2025

Recovery Collection: Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami 2011

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Tsunami : 04/30/2011 Fukushima japan
Fly and Dive/Shutterstock

Introduction

At 2:46pm on Friday, March 11, 2011, a Magnitude 9.0 earthquake struck off the northeast coast of Japan. This earthquake is the largest earthquake ever recorded in Japan, and the 4th largest earthquake recorded in the world. The earthquake caused a massive tsunami that devastated communities along Tohoku coastline, across many municipalities and multiple prefectures. The nuclear meltdown at the Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Plant ranked as the highest level 7 on the International Nuclear and Radiological Event Scale (INES)  of the International Atomic Energy Agency, making the 3.11 Great East Japan Earthquake, tsunami, and nuclear disaster a complex mega disaster with equally large and complicated challenges for recovery. 

The damage from this complex disaster was widespread and devastating. As of June 2021, the official death toll includes 19,747 people who lost their lives in the tsunami[1], and 2,556 people whose remains were never found are listed as missing[2]. This includes 3,774 people who died later whose death have been official recognized as “indirect deaths”[3]  caused by complications or other impacts of their experienced during and after the disasters. In the first few days after the disaster, more than 470,000 people evacuated from their homes, and in the following weeks, more than 350,000 continued living in long term evacuation. 

The tsunami affected areas of Tohoku include the jagged rias coastline of the Sanriku coast to the north, dotted with fishing communities where steep mountains meet the see. Sanriku coastcommunities have experienced large tsunamis every 30-40 years in the last century, including the 1896 Meiji Sanriku tsunami, the 1933 Showa Sanriku tsunami, and the tsunami that occurred after the 1960 Chile tsunami.  Recovery after these historic tsunamis included rebuilding with partial or complete relocation of communities away from the ocean, but over generations, people moved back into many of these areas. Large tsunamis have occurred less frequently in history in the flat areas of the Sendai Plain, further south, but there are records in this area of the 1611 Keicho Tsunami, and experts consider that the GEJE is similar to the 869 Jogan tsunami.

Facing massive tsunami devastation that exceeded the expectations and expert predictions, recovery policy was shaped by the idea of reconstruction to reduce future tsunami risk, and especially the relocation of residential areas to higher elevations and/or inland locations. The government created a national Reconstruction Agency, and a menu of fully funded projects that municipalities could chose to include in reconstruction plans for their towns. Other new aspects of recovery after the GEJE included addition support for the private sector, such as the construction of temporary shopping arcades and subsidies for projects supporting groups of local businesses. In an area with many elderly residents, there were efforts to learn from previous disasters and provide support for the elderly, children, women, and psychosocial support in general. However, with the large scale of the disaster, affected area, and number of survivors, some problems already known from previous disasters, such as impacts of the loss of community and isolation were sadly experienced again.

Recovery after the nuclear disaster includes new challenges, for which there are no easy answers, including long-term displacement, uncertain futures, the loss of hometowns. 

Japanese policies for post-disaster housing support include three clearly-defined phases, with distinct systems and responsibilities for funding and management. In the initial emergency  phase, people stay in evacuation centers, often established in school gymnasiums or other large government own facilities.  The provision of emergency temporary housing is carried out by the prefectural government. Since the 1995 Great Hanshin AwajiEarthquake in Kobe, all of Japan’s 47 prefectures had established contracts with the prefabricated builders association for their member companies to provide quickly provided prefabricated temporary housing in case of a large disaster. After the GEJE, there were more than 50,000 units of prefabricated temporary housing build for evacuees. Along with challenges to provide the needed numbers of temporary housing, combined with effective support for the promotion of local timber resources, there were also a large number of wooden temporary housing, especially those built by local contractors in Fukushima, which created more pleasant living environments for evacuees. In addition, the system of “designated temporary housing” in which the government pays for  the rent of private apartment, was used for a large number of evacuees for the first time in Japan, for more than 70,000 households.

Policies supporting permanent housing recovery were similar to previous housing recovery projects in Japan, including the provision of Disaster Recovery Public Housing (government-subsidized rental housing) for disaster survivors, as well as provision of new residential lots provided for recovery.


[1] Japanese Reconstruction Agency 2021: https://www.reconstruction.go.jp/topics/main-cat1/sub-cat1-1/210601_genjyoutokadai.pdf

[2] Japanese Reconstruction Agency 2021: https://www.reconstruction.go.jp/topics/main-cat1/sub-cat1-1/210601_genjyoutokadai.pdf

[3] Japanese Reconstruction Agency 2021: https://www.reconstruction.go.jp/topics/main-cat2/sub-cat2-6/20210630_kanrenshi.pdf

Related links
Government of Japan Reconstruction Agency
Hazards
Earthquake NBC - Nuclear, Biological, Chemical Tsunami
Themes
Recovery Shelter and housing
Country and region
Japan

Knowledge base

Items: 146
Japan: White Paper on Disaster Management in Japan 2020
Documents and publications
Publications
1 September 2021
White Paper on Disaster Management in Japan 2021

The White Paper on Disaster Management in Japan 2021 provides an overview of current disaster management measures in Japan.

内閣府 Cabinet Office (Japan)
Cover page for publication with title
Documents and publications
19 August 2021
Coastal exposure and residents’ mental health in the afected areas by the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami

This study aims to confirm whether there was an association between sea visibility and coastal proximity and mental health.

Nature Scientific Reports
Iwate moving toward reconstruction (Ver.4)
Documents and publications
6 August 2021
Iwate moving toward reconstruction (Ver.4)

This is a record of the reconstruction from March 2011 to March 2021 after the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami in Iwate.

岩手県 Iwate Prefectural Government
Documents and publications
Case Study
14 April 2021
Maladaptation, fragmentation, and other secondary effects of centralized post-disaster urban planning: The case of the 2011 “cascading” disaster in Japan

This report details how previous studies have documented the negative impacts and unexpected secondary effects of post-disaster housing development.

International Journal of Disaster Risk Reduction (Elsevier)
Documents and publications
13 April 2021
Double debt disaster: Law, policy, and social justice in the wake of Japan’s 2011 tsunami

"Double Debt Disaster" examines an increasingly serious and widespread, yet underexamined, phenomenon: obstacles to recovery from catastrophes caused by the concurrence of pre-disaster obligations with post-disaster capital needs and the destruction of collateral assets. No case is more instructive for understanding these problems than the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami, which entered history as the costliest disaster prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.

German Institute for Japanese Studies
The Great East Japan Earthquake Restoration Report <Digest>2011-2013
Documents and publications
1 April 2021
The Great East Japan Earthquake Restoration Report <Digest>2011-2013

This publication aims to prevent the memories of the Great East Japan Earthquake from fading and to pass them on to future generations. 

宮城県 Miyagi Prefectural Government
Miyagi Prefecture’s Restoration and Reconstruction Efforts
Documents and publications
1 April 2021
Miyagi Prefecture’s Restoration and Reconstruction Efforts

This is a report on the progress of Miyagi Prefecture's reconstruction efforts.

宮城県 Miyagi Prefectural Government
Japan: Earthquake and  Tsunami Final Repor
Documents and publications
Publications
Reports and analysis
30 March 2021
Japan: Earthquake and Tsunami

The report outlines the response and recovery efforts by the JRCS following the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami, detailing the context of the disaster, the use of funds, and the ongoing challenges over a ten-year period.

Japanese Red Cross Society
Great East Japan Earthquake Lessons Learned & Know-How Gained
Documents and publications
Case Study
1 March 2021
Great East Japan Earthquake Lessons Learned & Know-How Gained

This compendium brings together expert knowledge, analyzes key recovery case studies, and extracts lessons and know-how from ten years of recovery experience from the Great East Japan Earthquake and Tsunami.

Reconstruction Agency (Japan)
Exploratory case study for neighborhood participation in recovery process: A case from the great East Japan earthquake and tsunami in Kesennuma, Japan
Documents and publications
Case Study
Publications
30 January 2021
Exploratory case study for neighborhood participation in recovery process: A case from the great East Japan earthquake and tsunami in Kesennuma, Japan

This study examined whether community activities with the direct participation by disaster survivors enhance DRR activities, or external stakeholders strengthen those activities.

Progress in Disaster Science (Elsevier)

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