2010: A REALLY BAD YEAR FOR NATURAL DISASTERS
(UN Dispatch) - By Mark Leon Goldberg
If you ever find yourself thinking that there seemed to be a lot of natural disasters last year, you’d be correct. The Japan earthquake and tsunami has rightly dominated the headlines recently, but between the Pakistan floods, Haiti earthquake, floods in China and West Africa, 2010 was a particularly bad year for natural disasters.
In a new report A Year of Living Dangerously, the Brookings Institution takes a look back at the natural disasters that shook the world in 2010.
"Almost 300 million people were affected by natural disasters in 2010. The large disasters provided constant headlines throughout the year, beginning with the devastating earthquake in Haiti fol-lowed one month later by the even more severe—but far less deadly—earthquake in Chile. In the spring, ash spewing from volcano Eyjafjallajökull in Iceland paralyzed flights for weeks in the north-ern hemisphere. Early summer witnessed the worst Russian wildfires in history while a few months later, the steadily rising floodwaters in Pakistan covered 20 percent of the country. In sum, it was a terrible year in terms of natural disasters causing havoc and destruction around the globe. However, many of the largest disasters barely made headlines in the Western press.
Most notably, over 130 million Chinese were affected by the worst flooding in recent history—this is more than five times the number of people affected by the earthquake in Haiti and the Pakistani floods combined—but the Chinese floods received far less international attention than either Paki-stan or Haiti. The example of the Chinese floods illustrates one of the dilemmas in response to natu-ral disasters, which is that disasters, even major ones, receive significantly diverging media coverage. In the case of China, although over 130 million people were affected and some 4,000 were reported killed or missing, 1 very little international assistance was provided or requested. There was no overall United Nation funding appeal for those affected. The widely-regarded web-portal Reliefweb posted only 243 entries on the Chinese floods, primarily from the Chinese News Agency, in comparison with 10 times that number of entries on the flooding in Pakistan which occurred several months later in the year and affected around 20 million people.
Here are the top disasters from the report:
1. China - Flood - 134 million
2. China - Drought - 60
3. Pakistan - Flood - 18.1
4. Niger - Drought - 7.9
5. Thailand - Drought - 6.5
6. Ethiopia - Drought - 6.2
7. China (Jilan Province) - Flood - 6.0
8. Sudan - Drought - 4.3
9. Kenya - Drought - 3.8
10. Haiti - Earthquake - 3.7
TOTAL = 294 million people affected by top 10 disasters in 2010.
And the deadliest disasters of 2010:
1. Haiti - Earthquake - 316,000 deaths
2. Russia - Heatwave - 55,736
3. China - Earthquake - 2.968
4. Pakistan - Flood - 1,985
5. China - Landslides - 1,765
6. China - Flood - 1,691
7. Chile - Earthquake - 562
8. Indonesia - Tsunami - 530
9. Peru - Coldwave - 409
10. Uganda - Landslides - 388
TOTAL = 390,300 deaths
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