In addition, the high population density in risk areas further aggravates the situation. The number of human casualties continues to rise, from 1 674 deaths in 2015 to 2 045 in 2019.
According to the report of the United Nations Office for Disaster Risk Reduction (UNDRR), the total number of people who died between 2 000 and 2 019 is 79 732.
During the same period, India had reported 321 catastrophic events. It is the third country in the world in terms of the number of natural disasters [4], behind China and the United States.
According to the same report, India has suffered nearly 80 billion USD in economic losses in 20 years.
Breakdown of natural disasters in India per type of event and nature of losses
Natural disasters | Material loss | Human loss | |
---|---|---|---|
Floods | 52% | 63% | 32% |
Hurricanes | 30% | 19% | 32% |
Landslides | 10% | - | 2% |
Earthquakes | 5% | 10% | 33% |
Droughts | 3% | 5% | 1% |
Total | 100% | 100% | 100% |
Source : World Bank
Some of the most frequent disasters include :
Floods
After China, India is the second country hardest hit by floods with no less than 17 of such events annually, affecting 345 million Indians.
This scourge has caused a significant number of casualties and major economic damage to infrastructure, property, livelihoods and crops.
Heavy monsoon rains in the eastern part of the country often cause the Brahmaputra River to overflow, with disastrous consequences.
According to the 2019 Global Climate Risk Index report, floods account for 52% of the total calamities affecting India, claiming 63% of the material damage and 32% of the human losses reported as natural disasters.
On an annual average, 7.500.000 hectares are flooded, and 1.600 lives are lost.
Earthquakes
The probability of an earthquake is high in India, with nearly 60% of the territory being classified as a moderate to severe seismic risk zone.
According to seismologists, the Himalayas, one of the regions most exposed to earthquakes, should one day suffer a mega-shock caused by the pressure accumulated in the subsoil of the Himalayan arc.
The last earthquake to date occurred in 2015. With a magnitude of 7.8, the earthquake killed 9 000 people and injured more than 20 000 others. More than 600 000 homes were also destroyed by the tremor.
Cyclones
Located in the intertropical convergence zone, the Indian subcontinent is one of the regions most affected by cyclones. Its coastline stretching over more than 8 000 kilometers accounts for nearly 10% of the world's tropical cyclones, the majority of which emerge over the Bay of Bengal and strike the east coast of India.
On average, six to eight depressions form each year, two or three of which turn into tropical cyclones. A major cyclone (category 3 or more) develops every two years.
In May 2020, Cyclone Amphan [5], devastated India and Bangladesh, killing 84 people and devastating the coastal areas of both countries. It was the most powerful cyclone to hit the Bay of Bengal since the 1999 cyclone that killed 10 000 people in Odisha State (northeast India).
Heat waves and droughts
Extreme temperatures and resulting weather conditions significantly affect the health of residents and the agricultural sector. With global warming, these episodes of intense heat, more than 50 degrees, are becoming increasingly frequent.
According to Indian authorities, in the last four years the country has reported no less than 4 620 deaths caused by heat waves which generally occur between March and June.
The last event of this kind occurred in June 2019, claiming the lives of 50 people in 24 hours.
Over the past 20 years, India has also sustained the two most severe droughts in the world. They took place in 2002 and 2015 and affected 300 and 330 million Indians, respectively.
Despite the affordability of coverage and the intensity and frequency of natural events, the penetration rate of natural catastrophe insurance in India is almost nil, with less than 1% of the population contracting an insurance policy for this type of risk.
For several years, the authorities have been planning to set up a national pool dedicated to natural disasters, a structure struggling to see the light of day.
List of major natural disasters that have occurred over the last 20 years in India
Date | Place | Nature of the event | Economic losses | Insured losses | Number of fatalities | Number of affected persons |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(in billion USD) | ||||||
May 2020 | West Bengal | Hurricane Amphan | 13.5 | ND | 103 | 500 000 homeless |
August 2018 | Kerala | Floods | 3.52 | 0.37 | 504 | 223 139 homeless |
November 2015 | Chennai (Tamil Nadu) | Floods | 2.37 | 0.98 | 289 | - |
April 2015 | Himalaya | Storm | - | - | 78 | 20 000 injured |
October 2014 | Andhra Pradesh | Storm | 7.56 | 0.68 | 68 | 43 injured |
September 2014 | Jammu and Kashmir | Floods | 6.45 | 0.26 | 665 | - |
June 2013 | Uttarranchal | Floods | 1.21 | 0.55 | 5 748 | 4 473 injured 271 931 homeless |
September 2009 | Andhra Pradesh | Floods | 5.63 | 0.06 | 300 | 2 000 000 homeless |
August 2006 | Gujarat | Floods | 4.3 | 0.52 | 350 | 4 000 000 homeless |
July 2005 | Maharashtra | Floods | 4.36 | 0.93 | 1 150 | 15 000 homeless |
January 2001 | Gujarat | Earthquake | 6.13 | 0.14 | 19 737 | 166 850 injured 1 790 000 homeless |
Source: Swiss Re