Archive for the tag 'CRED'

Disasters in numbers – 2011 wasn’t that bad a year, just 207 million people affected

January 22nd, 2012

Welcome to 2012.  However, this year is unlikely to be better than 2011.

The thing about major disasters is that whilst we don’t know exactly where the next one is going to hit, we can be certain that there will be a next one – and even take some well-informed guesses about where it might hit.

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Natural disasters fall in 2009 – but no evidence of a downward trend

June 29th, 2010

The number of natural disasters around the world fell year-on-year in 2009 according to the Annual Disaster Statistical Review 2009 produced by CRED (Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters).  And it also fell below the 2000-08 average.
Zambezi flooding in Zambia
But CRED, which is a World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborating Centre, warns that although the upward trend in disaster occurrence has stabilized in 2009 it is not possible to identify a trend from this fact: “In general, a high variation exists in the reported number of deaths and victims from one year to the next.  This is mostly due to single disaster events that cause a tremendous human impact.”  In 2009 there were no events like the 2002 drought in India (300 million victims), the 2004 Tsunami (226,408 deaths  across 12 countries) or cyclone Nargis, which hit Myanmar in 2008 causing 138,366 deaths.
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Earthquakes – massive killers, but relatively little displacement

March 3rd, 2010

The first nine weeks of 2010 would appear to have brought an intensive run of earthquakes around the world – from Haiti in January to Chile in March, but with other significant quakes so far this year in the Philippines, Kyrgyzstan, Japan, the China/Russia/North Korea border and Afghanistan/NW Pakistan.  All of these measured more than 5 on the Richter Scale.

Earthquake damage_Haiti

But there are smaller quakes all over the globe, all the time.  The US Geological Survey (USGS) has a real-time map here showing the latest earthquakes in the world over the past seven days.  The current total, at the time of writing, is 366.  For the past seven days.

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