This blog provides a commentary on landslide events occurring worldwide, including the landslides themselves, latest research, and conferences and meetings. The blog is written on a personal basis by Dave Petley, who is the Wilson Professor of Hazard and Risk in the Department of Geography at Durham University in the United Kingdom.

This blog is a personal project that does not seek to represent Durham University.

Thursday, 14 October 2010

Some statistics on disasters worldwide


 Yesterday was the annual United Nations International Day for Disaster Reduction, which this year had a strong urban theme.  To highlight the event, which has been somewhat overshadowed by the extraordinary rescue of the Chilean miners, UNISDR put out a press release highlighting the costs of disasters worldwide.  The statistics are somewhat sobering:
  • So far in 2010 more than 236,000 people have been killed in disasters
  • 256 million people have been affected by disaster events, mostly in urban areas
  • The cost of disasters in the first nine months of this year is US$81 billion.  Most losses are uninsured
With regard to the vulnerability of urban areas:
  • More than a billion people live in urban slums
  • An estimated 3,351 cities are situated in coastal zones that are potentially vulnerable to sea level rise
  • Six of the ten largest cities are in seismically active areas
To mark the day, Xinhua released statistics on disaster impacts in China this year to date:
  • Floods, landslides and mudslides have killed 3,313 people so far this year
  • 15.7 million people have had to relocate
  • Economic losses are estimated to be a staggering US$55.4 billion

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