Tun Lwin

Tun Lwin
Dr
ထွန်းလွင်
Deputy-director of Ministry of Meteorology and Hydrology, Myanmar
In office
1980–2003
Director-General of Department of Meteorology and Hydrology
In office
2004–2009
Personal details
Born (1948-01-17) January 17, 1948
Kula village, Ngazun, Myanmar
Nationality Burmese
Spouse(s) Mu Mu Than
Children 3
Parents Thein Maung (father)
Aye Gyi (mother)
Residence Yangon
Alma mater Yangon University, Florida State University, Lafom Memorial High School Mandalay
Website https://www.facebook.com/tunlwin48

Dr. Tun Lwin (Burmese: ထွန်းလွင်, also Htun Lwin; born 17 January 1948) is a Burmese meteorologist, who served as Director-General of Department of Meteorology and Hydrology.[1][2][3]

Biography

Tun Lwin was born in 17 January 1948 in Kula Village, Ngazun, British Burma, to parents Theing Maung and Aye Gyi. He is the eldest son of two siblings, having a one younger brother. He growing up in Mandalay and educated high shool at Lafom Memorial High School in Mandalay. He holds a PhD in Physics and has worked in Burma's Department of Meteorology and Hydrology since 1965 when he was 17 years old in 1965. He then served as Deputy-Director in the Ministry of Meteorology and Hydrology till 2003 when he was promoted to Director General of Department of Meteorology and Hydrology. One of the most notable occurrences during his appointment was Cyclone Nargis, the worst natural disaster to hit Myanmar in recorded history. Despite the high number of casualties and devastation, Dr Tun Lwin was commended after initial criticism for his prediction and speedy warning of the Cyclone especially considering the limited resources and political bureaucracy of Burma at the time. After 44 years in total at the DMH, Dr Tun Lwin retired in 2009.[3]

Today, Dr Tun Lwin is a well-known, active "netizen" in Myanmar who operates a free, non-profit service as Myanmar Climate Change Watch (MCCW). In addition to giving talks and appearing on various media such as newspapers, journals, magazines, television and radio channels to educate the public on weather and climate, he also provides free weather updates through Facebook where he also sometimes posts updates and anecdotes about his own personal life and opinions.[3]

He has written numerous successful books on weather in Myanmar, works with local radio stations on weather-related segments and regularly writes articles on various topics not limited to just weather updates in Burmese magazines and newspaper journals. His book, The Girl Called La Niña and Articles about Natural Disasters, won the Science Knowledge Prize in the Thuta Swesone literary award in 2007.[3] In 2017, he received the 7Day Heroes award for his non-profit work for the country in his field of meteorology, weather and climate.

Many of his presentations were at talks and seminars relating to climate change frequently both locally and internationally, in cities and villages in rural areas. Since his resignation from the DMH in 2009, Tun Lwin has served as a technical adviser to the Regional Integrated Multi-hazard Early Warning System (RIMES) at the Asian Institute of Technology in Thailand. He also served as a consultant to the Myanmar Red Cross Society, CARE Myanmar, Action Aid Myanmar and Myanmar Egress's Network Activities Group. He has also been involved with the International Centre for Water Hazard and Risk Management (ICHARM), Myanmar Egress, World Vision Myanmar, Global Green and other organizations, focusing primarily on climate change and how to minimize damage caused by natural disasters.[3][4]

On December 10–11, 2009, Lwin presented his 30-page paper at a seminar hosted by the International Centre for Water Hazard (ICHARM) in Tsukuba, Japan, stressing the importance of awareness of storms, tsunamis and flooding in delta regions and potential natural disaster preparedness strategies in the region.[5] In October 2010 he spoke to the Burmese media about the expected path of Cyclone Giri.[6]

In 5 August 2011, he founded Tun Lwin Foundation.

Personal life

He currently resides in Yangon, Myanmar with his wife, Mu Mu Than, and three children, two daughters and one son, of which the eldest is married with three children of her own.[3]

References

  1. YEN SANING (9 September 2015). "Tun Lwin: 'Each Year There is Drought in the Dry Zone, Flooding in the Delta'". The Irrawaddy. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  2. "Myanmar Natural Disasters News". World News Report. Retrieved 11 November 2010.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Paing Theingi (12 October 2015). "ဘဝမှာ ငယ်ငယ်က ရည်မှန်းချက်နဲ့ အနီးစပ်ဆုံးကိုက်ညီခဲ့တယ်ဆိုတဲ့ မိုးလေဝသပညာရှင် ဒေါက်တာထွန်းလွင်" (in Burmese). Mizzima. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  4. "U Tun Lwin" (in Burmese). Mizzima. Retrieved 15 June 2018.
  5. "Research papers to be published in Japan". The Myanmar Times. Archived from the original on September 28, 2010. Retrieved November 11, 2010.
  6. "Relief Urgently Needed as Cyclone Giri Leaves Dozens Missing". Irrawaddy.org. Archived from the original on November 9, 2010. Retrieved November 11, 2010.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.