
Oct 9, 2025
When hours matter, population data turns chaos into priorities. Incorporate gridded estimates into resource planning to better align logistics with on-the-ground needs.
From chaos to priorities: why population data matters
In the first 72 hours, responders need more than headlines. They need denominators. Gridded population and displacement data turn satellite images and field calls into an ordered list: where people are, how many are exposed, and who needs help first. Start at the source: shareable crisis data on HDX and OCHA's latest assessment of gaps in open humanitarian data (report).
Know your basemap: WorldPop and LandScan
WorldPop produces high-resolution, modeled population surfaces, while LandScan estimates ambient population. Both help when official counts are old or disrupted. Accuracy depends on census inputs and methods-see WorldPop's notes on how mapping quality relates to census detail (guidance).
Track movement, not just stock
Crises move people. Pair baselines with flow data: IOM's DTM for displacement tracking, WFP's mVAM/mobile surveys for fast food-security signals, and field PDAs aligned with FEMA's framework where applicable (PDA guide).
Turn analysis into operations
Build a population basemap (WorldPop/LandScan) and annotate known shelters and clinics.
Overlay hazards, access, and competitor footprints (where responders operate) to avoid duplication and blind spots.
Use drive-time to staging areas and air/road constraints to plan delivery windows.
Publish a decision packet: inputs, vintages, and maps-so partners can reuse the same denominators.
Where to go next
Census vs. LandScan vs. WorldPop - understand your basemap choices.
Sphere standards - align indicators with accepted thresholds.