 |
| The
report indicates that 3.4 billion people, more
than half the world’s population, live in
areas where at least one hazard could significantly
impact them. Above: Three of eighteen disaster
hotspots maps for Bangladesh. View
more maps Image credit: The Center for Hazards
and Risk Research |
New York, March 29, 2005—The
World Bank has published a report entitled, “Natural
Disaster Hotspots: A Global Risk Analysis,” that
presents a global view of disaster risks associated
with some major natural hazards—drought, floods,
cyclones, earthquakes, volcanoes and landslides. The
report identifies high-risk geographic regions so that
development efforts can be better informed and designed
to reduce disaster-related losses in the future.
The report was produced by researchers
from Columbia University, the World Bank, the Norwegian
Geotechnical Institute and other partners. It indicates
that 3.4 billion people, more than half the world’s
population, live in areas where at least one hazard
could significantly impact them. Other key findings
include:
- Approximately 20 percent of the Earth’s
land surface is exposed to at least one of the natural
hazards evaluated;
- 160 countries have more than one quarter
of their population in areas of high mortality risk
from one or more hazards;
- More than 90 countries have more than
10 percent of their population in areas of high mortality
risk from two or more hazards;
- In 35 countries, more than 1 in 20
residents lives at relatively high mortality risk
from 3 or more hazards;
- More than one-third of the United
States’ population lives in hazard-prone areas,
but only one percent of its land area ranks in the
highest disaster-related mortality risk category;
- Taiwan may be the place on Earth most
vulnerable to natural hazards, with 73 percent of
its land and population exposed to three or more
hazards;
- More than 90 percent of the populations
of Bangladesh, Nepal, the Dominican Republic, Burundi,
Haiti, Taiwan, Malawi, El Salvador, and Honduras
live in areas at high relative risk of death from
two or more hazards; and
- Poorer countries in the developing
world are more likely to have difficulty absorbing
repeated disaster-related losses and costs associated
with disaster relief, recovery, rehabilitation and
reconstruction.
On the topic of geographical distress
and related impacts on poverty, Jeffrey D. Sachs, director
of The Earth Institute at Columbia University wrote
in his newly published End of Poverty: Economic
Possibilities for our Time, “Adverse geography
poses problems that can be solved, typically through
physical investments and good conservation management.
But adverse geography raises the costs of solving the
problems of farming, transport, and health, and thereby
makes it much more likely that a country will be caught
in a poverty trap.” Today’s report, notes
Professor Sachs, “offers precisely the scientific
underpinnings necessary to manage natural hazards in
ways that reduce poverty and vulnerability.”
Dr. Maxx Dilley, report co-author
and research scientist in disaster and risk management
at the International Research Institute for Climate
Prediction (IRI) at the Earth Institute, suggests that
disaster preparedness become a standard element in
development strategies. “With natural hazard
cycles repeating themselves every few years, developing
countries find themselves in a vicious cycle of loss
and recovery without the ability to move forward and
achieve sustainable development. We recommend that
the international community manage disaster risk as
an integral part of development planning rather than
only as a humanitarian issue.”
The authors categorized regions
by their level of exposure, or vulnerability, to multiple
hazards. Vulnerability was estimated from hazard-specific
mortality and economic loss rates for World Bank regions
and country wealth classes, calculated from 20 years
of historical loss data from the Emergency Events Database
(EMDAT), developed by the Centre for Research on the
Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) in Brussels.
The information presented in the
report aims to enhance disaster prevention and preparedness
in high risk areas. The results are intended to inform
measures that target more localized and detailed risk
assessments, encourage implementation of risk-based
disaster management and emergency response strategies,
and promote development of long-term land use plans
and multi-hazard risk management strategies. Additional
recommendations from the report include prioritizing
risk-reduction efforts in areas where risk management
is most needed, and improving information exchanges
among organizations and individuals working at local,
national, regional and global levels.
Margaret Arnold, report co-author
and program manager at the World Bank’s Hazard
Management Unit (HMU), said, “Central America,
East and South Asia, and large areas of the Mediterranean
and the Middle East are at the greatest risk of loss
from multiple hazards. Additionally, our analysis shows
that in the last 20 years, developed countries have
not faced relatively high mortality risk from hazards
and related vulnerabilities, whereas industrial and
lower-middle-income countries generally see larger
economic losses.”
The report notes that from 1980
to 2003, the World Bank provided US$14.4 billion in
emergency lending to 20 countries, including India,
Bangladesh, Mexico, Brazil, Honduras and China. With
the exception of one of all 20 countries, half of their
populations live in areas at a relatively high mortality
risk from one or more hazards, and all the countries
have at least half of their gross domestic product
(GDP) generated in areas of relatively high economic
risk from one or more hazards.
“This has serious implications
for how the World Bank works in these and other vulnerable
countries. The analysis is part of our efforts to promote
a more proactive, preventative approach to address
disasters before they hit in order to enhance our mission
of fighting poverty,” said Maryvonne Plessis-Fraissard,
director of the World Bank’s Transportation and
Urban Development Department.
Dr. Arthur Lerner-Lam, report
co-author and director of the Center for Hazards and
Risk Research (CHRR) at the Earth Institute agrees: “These
statistics provide us with a strong warning that it
is imperative to reduce the vulnerability of developing
countries to natural hazards as part of any international
poverty reduction strategy. This is one of our key
recommendations to the international development community.”
In order to demonstrate how to reduce
vulnerability and risk in areas that are prone to multiple
hazards such as storm surges, landslides and drought,
the project undertook case studies in Sri Lanka, Caracas,
Venezuela and the Tana River basin in Kenya. The Caracas
case study demonstrates how the vulnerability of urban
areas can be reduced by incorporating locally appropriate
risk-sensitive strategies into urban development planning.
Click
here for information on ordering the “Hotspots” report
and on accessing the core datasets developed by the
project
The report was a joint effort of
the World Bank’s HMU and the Earth Institute’s
CHRR, IRI, and the Center for International Earth Science
Information Network (CIESIN). The core project team
included researchers from the World Bank’s Development
Economics Research Group, and the International Center
for Geohazards at the Norwegian Geotechnical Institute,
in addition to the World Bank’s HMU and the Earth
Institute. The project also worked closely with the
United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the
United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), which
recently published the report Reducing Disaster
Risk: A Challenge for Development. Funding was
provided by the United Kingdom's Department for International
Development and the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
through the ProVention Consortium, as well as by the
U.S. Agency for International Development.
The World Bank Group’s mission
is to fight poverty and improve the living standards
of people in the developing world. It is a development
Bank which provides loans, policy advice, technical
assistance and knowledge sharing services to low and
middle income countries to reduce poverty. For more
information, please visit www.worldbank.org. |