Indonesia Ranks as Second-Riskiest Place in World for Natural Disasters

Paris. Indonesia is one of the countries most vulnerable to natural disasters, according to an international study released on Thursday. It joins Bangladesh and Iran at the top of the list. Asia?s twin giants, China and India, are among the 15 countries that, out of 229, are rated as 'xtreme' risk.

The Natural Disasters Risk Index is compiled by a British advisory firm, Maplecroft, on the basis of disasters that occurred from 1980 to 2010. It draws on a basket of indicators, including the number and frequency of these events, the total deaths that were caused and the death toll as a proportion of the countrys population.Disasters include earthquakes, volcanic eruptions, tsunamis, storms, flooding, drought, landslides, heat waves and epidemics. Poverty is an important factor in countries where both the frequency and impacts of natural disasters are severe, said Anna Moss, Maplecrofts environmental analyst. Poor infrastructure, plus dense overcrowding in high-risk areas like flood plains, river banks, steep slopes and reclaimed land, continually result in high casualty figures. According to the NDRIs figures, Bangladesh has suffered more than 191,000 fatalities as a result of natural disasters in the past 30 years, and Indonesia a nearly equal number, the vast majority of which were inflicted by the December 2004 tsunami. In Iran, the big vulnerability factor is earthquakes, which claimed 74,000 lives. India, ranked 11th, lost 141,000 livesĀ  including 50,000 to earthquakes, 40,000 to floods, 15,000 to epidemics and 23,000 to stormsĀ  while the tally in China, rated 12th, was 148,000 lives, of which 87,000 were lost in the 2008 Sichuan quake. Three G-8 countries are considered high risk, the next category down from extreme.They are France (17th in the overall rankings) and Italy (18th), which were hit by killer heat waves in 2003 and 2006, and the United States (37th), whacked by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. The countries least at risk are Andorra, Bahrain, Gibraltar, Liechtenstein, Malta, Monaco, Qatar, San Marino and the United Arab Emirates. Moss pointed to warnings of the impact of climate change on weather patterns, resulting in more frequent and bigger episodes of drought and flood. Our research highlights the need for even the wealthiest countries to focus on disaster risk reduction, she said.

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