Types of Disasters
Types of Disasters
Disasters can take many different forms, and the duration can range from an hourly disruption to days or
weeks of ongoing destruction. Below is a list of the various types of disasters – both natural and man-
made or technological in nature – that can impact a community.
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Hurricanes and tropical storms are among the most powerful natural disasters because of their size and
destructive potential. Tornadoes are relatively brief but violent, potentially causing winds in excess of 200
mph. Both earthquakes and tornadoes strike suddenly without warning.
Flooding is the most common of natural hazards, and requires an understanding of the natural systems of
our environment, including floodplains and the frequency of flooding events. Wildfires are more prevalent
in the event of a drought. Disasters impacting food supply can be extremely costly; American officials say
that a food contamination scare similar to the one that hit the Belgian poultry industry in the 1990’s could
jeopardize U.S. agricultural exports in excess of $140 billion.
Hazardous materials
Power service disruption & Chemical threat and biological
blackout weapons
Cyber attacks
Nuclear power
Explosion
plant and nuclear blast
Civil unrest
Radiological emergencies
Disasters also can be caused by humans. Hazardous materials emergencies include chemical spills and
groundwater contamination. Workplace fires are more common and can cause significant property
damage and loss of life. Communities are also vulnerable to threats posed by extremist groups who use
violence against both people and property.
High-risk targets include military and civilian government facilities, international airports, large cities and
high-profile landmarks. Cyber-terrorism involves attacks against computers and networks done to
intimidate or coerce a government or its people for political or social objectives.
Disaster risk
Disaster risk is expressed as the likelihood of loss of life, injury or
destruction and damage from a disaster in a given period of time.
Forward looking the likelihood of loss of life, destruction and damage in a given
period of time
Dynamic: it can increase or decrease according to our ability to reduce vulnerability
Invisible: it is comprised of not only the threat of high-impact events, but also the
frequent, low-impact events that are often hidden
Unevenly distributed around the earth: hazards affect different areas, but the
pattern of disaster risk reflects the social construction of exposure and vulnerability in
different countries
Emergent and complex: many processes, including climate change and globalized
economic development, are creating new, interconnected risks
Understanding disaster risk requires us to not only consider the hazard, our exposure
and vulnerability but also society's capacity to protect itself from disasters. The ability of
communities, societies and systems to resist, absorb, accommodate, recover from
disasters, whilst at the same time improve wellbeing, is known as resilience.
Risk is a forward looking concept, so disaster risk can be understood as the likelihood (or probability) of loss of life,
injury or destruction and damage from a disaster in a given period of time (adapted from UNISDR, 2015a).
Hazard
A hazard is a process, phenomenon or human activity that may cause
loss of life, injury or other health impacts, property damage, social and
economic disruption or environmental degradation. Hazards may be
natural, anthropogenic or socionatural in origin (UNISDR, 2016).
The classification schemes for hazards vary across different research institutions and
governments, but these can be divided into (UNSIDR, 2017):
Each hazard often triggers a sub-set of hazards, for instance tropical cyclones (known as
hurricanes in the Atlantic Ocean, cyclones in the Indian Ocean and typhoons in the
Northern Pacific Ocean) can bring intense winds, storm surge and heavy rainfall, as well
as trigger secondary hazards, for instance landslides. A series of triggering relationships
can cause a domino or cascading effect, for instance in the case of the tsunami-
earthquake-nuclear crisis in Japan, 2011.
Exposure
The situation of people, infrastructure, housing, production capacities
and other tangible human assets located in hazard-prone areas.
The extent to which exposed people or economic assets are actually at risk is generally
determined by how vulnerable they are (UNISDR, 2009), as it is possible to be exposed
but not vulnerable (IPCC, 2012).
However, increasing evidence suggests that the case of extreme hazards the degree of
disaster risk is a consequence of exposure more than it is a result of vulnerability
(UNISDR, 2015a). For instance, in the case of the 26 December 2004 Indian Ocean
tsunami all those exposed to tsunamis were at risk, no matter their income, ethnicity or
social class (UNISDR, 2011).
Typhoon Lekima and Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda) comparisonSource: UNITAR (2014)
Many hazard prone areas, such as coastlines, volcanic slopes and flood plains, attract
economic and urban development, offer significant economic benefits or are of cultural
or religious significance to the people who live there. As more people and assets are
exposed, risk in these areas becomes more concentrated. At the same time, risk also
spreads as cities expand and as economic and urban development transform previously
sparsely populated areas (UNISDR, 2009b).
Large volumes of capital continue to flow into hazard-prone areas, leading to significant
increases in the value of exposed economic assets. If global exposure continues to trend
upwards, it may increase disaster risk to dangerous levels (UNISDR, 2015b).
Vulnerability
The characteristics determined by physical, social, economic and
environmental factors or processes which increase the susceptibility of
an individual, a community, assets or systems to the impacts of
hazards.
Despite some divergence over the meaning of vulnerability, most experts agree that
understanding vulnerability requires more than analysing the direct impacts of a
hazard. Vulnerability also concerns the wider environmental and social conditions that
limit people and communities to cope with the impact of hazard (Birkmann, 2006).
Vulnerability is complex.
Vulnerability is not simply about poverty, but extensive research over the past 30 years
has revealed that it is generally the poor who tend to suffer worst from disasters (Twigg,
2004; Wisner et al., 2004; UNISDR, 2009b). Poverty is both a driver and consequence
of disaster risk (particularly in countries with weak risk governance) because economic
pressures force people to live in unsafe locations (see exposure) and conditions (Wisner
et al., 2004). Poverty and the other multi-dimensional factors and drivers that create
vulnerability mean that susceptibility to the impacts of hazards is often, but not always,
associated with certain groups, including women, children, the elderly, the disabled,
migrants and displaced populations, amongst others.
Physical factors
e.g. poor design and construction of buildings, unregulated land use planning, etc.
Social factors
Economic factors
e.g. the uninsured informal sector, vulnerable rural livelihoods, dependence on single
industries, globalisation of business and supply chains, etc.
Environmental factors
In the context of different hazards, some groups are more susceptible to damage, loss
and suffering than others and likewise (within these groups) some people experience
higher levels of vulnerability than others (Wisner et al., 2004). Vulnerable groups find it
hardest to reconstruct their livelihoods following a disaster, and this in turn makes them
more vulnerable to the effects of subsequent hazard events (Wisner et al., 2004).
Consequently, we have to reduce vulnerability in order to reduce disaster risk.
The chain of causes of vulnerability, from the underlying drivers of vulnerability (e.g.
socio-economic processes) to the immediate conditions that present themselves (e.g.
poor quality housing), can be both long and complex; but by tracking it we can identify
the progression of vulnerability that builds pressures on communities. These pressures
can be released by taking measures to reduce vulnerability at various points along the
causal chain (Twigg, 2004).
Owing to its different facets, there is no one single method for assessing
vulnerability. Ideally, any assessment should adopt a holistic approach to assessing
vulnerability. In reality, methods are usually divided into those that consider physical
(or built environment) vulnerability and those that consider socio-economic
vulnerability.