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Natural Disasters - Forecasting Hurricane Occurrence, Economic and Life Losses

"Events such as hurricanes, earthquakes, floods, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions, and tornadoes are natural disasters because they negatively impact society, and so they must be measured and understood in human-related terms. At the U.S. Geological Survey, we have developed a new method to examine fatality and dollar-loss data, and to make probabilistic estimates of the frequency and magnitude of future events. This information is vital to large sectors of society including disaster relief agencies and insurance companies."
--Dr. Christopher Barton
Natural disasters have become so expensive that the Federal Government shares in the economic risk. Forecasting this risk is therefore a significant issue.

Insurance coverage for losses resulting from natural disasters is typically less than 20 percent of the total loss, because of limited participation in voluntary insurance coverage. The remainder of the dollar losses are covered by the Federal Government through emergency allocations, the amount of which can increase the national debt. As a result of Hurricane Andrew, where the losses exceed 25 billion dollars, the U.S. Congress is examining the feasibility of establishing a National "insurance" fund from which uninsured losses can be paid when natural disasters strike. Forecasts of future losses based on traditional interpretations of available data produce highly variable results and seemingly yield few patterns. A new method developed by USGS scientists addresses the issue of forecasting the size and number of national disasters and their attendant losses.

Above - Natural disasters represent the intersection of two sets: nature and population. As the population continues to grow, so does the area of intersection, leading to costlier and deadlier disasters.

Above - Natural disasters are a "growth" industry. Since the 1960s, economic losses from natural disasters on a global scale have tripled, while insured losses have quintupled. (after Berz, 1992, Natural Hazards, 5, 95-102)

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U.S. Department of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, Center for Coastal Geology
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Updated: 05 January, 2001 @ 03:06 PM (MLM)