The Cost of Natural Disasters of 2023

Syria after the earthquake, Feb. 15, 2023. Photo by Ahmed Akacha/Pexels.

by Rina Hoffman

January 15, 2024

Disturbingly, the human cost of natural disasters reached unprecedented heights last year: 74,000 lives were lost globally in 2023 as a result of natural disasters according to an assessment by Munich Re, a leading provider of reinsurance, primary insurance and insurance-related risk solutions.

This, Munich Re writes, is “well above the annual average of the last five years (10,000).”

Geophysical hazards like earthquakes, tsunamis and volcanoes played a pivotal role — accounting for 85% of the total fatalities and marking a departure from years of “relative calm.”

With 63,000 lives lost in 2023 to geophysical hazards, this grim toll surpasses anything seen since 2010, Munich Re finds.

Economic cost of last year’s natural disasters

Economic losses, on the other hand, were dominated by severe storms. Around 76% of the overall losses were weather-related, with geophysical causes accounting for the remaining 24%.

According to Munich Re, the economic damage caused by natural disasters in 2023 amounted to an alarming $250 billion, echoing the previous year’s losses that also stood at $250 billion. This year’s economic damage is also in line with the last five-year average.

However, Munich Re observed a notable difference in the amoung of losses insured between last year in 2022.

While nearly 40% of the losses, $95 billion, were insured last year, this percentage stood at about 50% in 2022, with $125 billion of the losses having been insured.

As Munich Re explains, unlike in previous years, in 2023 “there were no mega-disasters in industrialised countries that drove losses up (such as Hurricane Ian in 2022, which caused overall losses of US$ 100 billion and insured losses of $60 billion).”

Instead, last year’s losses stemmed from a multitude of severe regional storms.

Munich Re notes that the scale of losses due to storms has “never been recorded before in the USA or in Europe,” adding that “loss statistics from thunderstorms in North America and other regions are trending upwards.”

Costliest disasters of 2023

The most destructive natural disaster in 2023 was the series of earthquakes that hit southeast Turkey and Syria in February, claiming 58,000 lives and resulting in overall losses of $50 billion.

The most severe in the series, the 7.8-magnitude earthquake in Turkey that was the first to hit on February 6, was the strongest in the country in decades. This earthquake was identified by Munich Re as the single-costliest natural disaster in 2023.

cost of natural disasters in 2023
In the Photo: Earthquake aftermath in İskenderun, Hatay, Turkey, Feb. 6. 2023. Photo Credit: Çağlar Oskay.

As Munich Re notes, despite mandatory earthquake insurance for residential buildings in Turkey, insured losses amounted to just $5.5 billion.

Typhoon Doksuri, which “brushed the coastline of the Philippines before making landfall at Jinjiang in Fujian province on the Chinese mainland” in July, was the second-costliest natural disaster of the year. The typhoon was “accompanied by extremely heavy rainfall that triggered destructive flooding” and caused around $25 billion in overall losses. Around $2 billion of these losses were insured.

cost of natural disasters in 2023
In the Photo: Aftermath of Typhoon Doksuri in Caduang Tete, San Gabriel, Poblacion and Santa Rita, Macabebe Road, Pampanga, the Philippines, Aug. 8, 2023. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

Hurricane Otis, the “most severe storm ever to hit Mexico’s Pacific coast,” was the third-most costly disaster of 2023. Overall losses are estimated at $12 billion, of which $4 billion were insured — “due to the high concentration of hotels in the city” of Acapulco, Munich Re writes.

cost of natural disasters in 2023
In the Photo: Aftermath of Hurricane Otis in a WalMart store, Boulevard de las Naciones, Granjas del Marqués. Aerial images of the impact of Hurricane Otis, Acapulco, Guerrero, Mexico, Nov. 4, 2023. Source: Wikimedia Commons.

This article was originally published on IMPAKTER. Read the original article.

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