Some 40% of natural disaster deaths since 1960 have been caused by earthquakes
Kyodo/Reuters
Natural disasters around the world have resulted in economic
losses of more than $7tn (£4.9tn; €6.2tn) since the turn of the 20th
century, according to a study. Nearly two-thirds of that amount was the
result of floods, rainfall and storms, with flooding alone accounting
for 40% of the total losses.
The number of deaths from 35,000 natural calamities since
1900, including earthquakes, volcanoes and bushfires, is above eight
million. The final death toll, including deaths due to long-term effects
such as drought or famine, is likely to be much higher.
The database was compiled by a team from the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
in Germany, who collated information from online archives, books, news
reports and publications in over 90 languages. It took more than a
decade to complete.
"Over the last 100+ years, the economic losses via natural
disasters, in absolute terms, have increased," said risk engineer and
geophysicist Dr James Daniell. "Less developed nations are often more vulnerable
towards catastrophes — that means relative to population and capital —
more deaths and higher economic losses are expected post-event."
Floods have been responsible for the highest percentage of economic
losses between 1900 and 2015, while storms have accounted for the most
damage since 1960. Earthquakes have accounted for 26% of the total
losses, droughts 12%, wildfire 2% and volcanoes 1%.
Dr Daniell believes collating and quantifying information on historic
natural disasters is crucial to modelling future risks. His study
showed that countries are by and large less vulnerable to natural
calamities now than they were in the past, with improvements in flood
protection the most prominent change in the past century.
Floods have accounted for 40% of economic losses from natural catastrophes since 1900
Reuters"It is often
impossible to get one exact value for a disaster event, as economic
losses are often difficult to quantify, and death tolls are often
overestimated or underestimated," Dr Daniell observed.
The number of deaths from natural disasters has remained virtually
constant at 50,000 per year. However, relative to the fast-growing
population of the world as a whole, death tolls have gone down
significantly over the last 115 years.
"Over the entire time period, half of people died due to flood.
However, with better planning, warnings and preventive measures, the
death rate due to floods is significantly decreasing," Dr Daniell
stated. "Since 1960, earthquakes have caused the highest death
percentage with around 40% of disaster deaths."
The deadliest natural disaster in recorded history is the Great
Floods of 1931 in China, with a mean estimate of 2.5 million deaths.
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