UN: WEATHER DISASTERS SOAR IN NUMBERS, COST, BUT DEATHS FALL
AppleMagazine|September 03, 2021
Weather disasters are striking the world four to five times more often and causing seven times more damage than in the 1970s, the United Nations weather agency reports.
UN: WEATHER DISASTERS SOAR IN NUMBERS, COST, BUT DEATHS FALL

But these disasters are killing far fewer people. In the 1970s and 1980s, they killed an average of about 170 people a day worldwide. In the 2010s, that dropped to about 40 per day, the World Meteorological Organization said in a report this week that looks at more than 11,000 weather disasters in the past half-century.

The report comes during a disaster-filled summer globally, including deadly floods in Germany and a heat wave in the Mediterranean, and with the United States simultaneously struck by powerful Hurricane Ida and an onslaught of drought-worsened wildfires.

“The good news is that we have been able to minimize the amount of casualties once we have started having growing amount of disasters: heatwaves, flooding events, drought, and especially ... intense tropical storms like Ida, which has been hitting recently Louisiana and Mississippi in the United States,” Petteri Taalas, WMO’s secretary-general, told a news conference.

This story is from the September 03, 2021 edition of AppleMagazine.

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This story is from the September 03, 2021 edition of AppleMagazine.

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