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The world is emerging from 'the year of disasters'
knoxstudio.com ^ | December 30, 2004 | JOAN LOWY

Posted on 01/04/2005 10:35:32 AM PST by Destro

The world is emerging from 'the year of disasters'

By JOAN LOWY
Scripps Howard News Service
December 30, 2004

- The tsunamis that devastated southern Asia this week bring to a close a year of natural disasters that left hardly a corner of the planet unscathed.

The year began in the wake of a massive earthquake in the ancient city of Bam in Iran, on the day after Christmas 2003, that killed about 30,000 people and destroyed 70 percent of homes, schools, hospitals and businesses.

It closed with the most powerful earthquake in recent decades sending walls of water crashing ashore in Indonesia, Thailand, India, Sri Lanka and eight other countries, killing more than 116,000 people, a total that rises daily.

In between those two great quakes was a particularly destructive Atlantic hurricane season. There were 15 named tropical storms this year - the average is 10 - and nine of them struck the United States, including four hurricanes that ripped through Florida. The last time four hurricanes struck a single state in one year was 1886 in Texas.

Torrential rainfall from Hurricane Jeanne produced floods that claimed nearly 3,000 lives Haiti in September. The disaster came after floods and landslides in Haiti and the Dominican Republic in late May, in which more than 2,000 people were killed and several thousand others left homeless. Hurricane damage in the United States and the Caribbean totaled an estimated $43 billion.

Hurricane Ivan was one of the most destructive and strongest storms ever, maintaining a strength of category force 4 to 5 for more than five days. The storm caused serious damage to offshore platforms in the Gulf of Mexico, one of several factors that helped send oil prices spiraling.

But perhaps the most bizarre twist to the 2004 hurricane season was in March, when Caterina, the first recorded hurricane to develop in the South Atlantic, made landfall along the southern coast of Brazil, causing $350 million in damages. Scientists had thought water and air temperatures were too cold in the South Atlantic to permit the formation of hurricanes and, until Caterina, none had been recorded in 48 years of satellite observation.

"Every year there are disasters that claim hundreds of thousands of lives and we've had our share in 2004," said Jay Lawrimore, chief of the climate monitoring branch at the National Climatic Data Center in Asheville, N.C.

"Excluding the tsunamis, on a global scale it was not that unusual" a year except that there were "some notable high-profile events," Lawrimore said.

In the North Pacific, for example, 2004 was only an average season for tropical cyclones and typhoons in terms of frequency, but an especially unlucky year for Japan. Ten typhoons (the Pacific equivalent of a hurricane) made landfall in Japan, obliterating the previous record of six in one year. They caused 209 deaths and billions of dollars in damage. Typhoon Tokage was one of the strongest typhoons ever recorded.

Largely unnoticed in the attention focused on hurricanes were record numbers of tornadoes in the United States, many spawned by hurricanes. The year saw 1,717 tornadoes, compared to the previous record of 1,424 set in 1998.

There were 182 tornadoes reported in the United States during August, 56 more than the previous August record set in 1979, and 235 tornadoes reported in September, shattering the previous September record of 139 set in 1967, according to the National Weather Service.

Despite the record number of tornadoes, they tended to be less intense than the top categories of dangerous twisters, Lawrimore said.

As if earthquakes, hurricanes and tornadoes weren't enough, Alaska recorded its worst wildfire season, leaving 6.5 million acres of forest charred. Record warm, dry weather was partly to blame.

Drought continued to punish much of the western United States, Australia and parts of Africa. Some parts of the Rocky Mountain West experienced their seventh straight year of drought.

Great swarms of crop-eating locusts devastated swaths of Africa. The combination of locusts and drought may mean greater hunger next year.

There were also summer heat waves in Spain, Portugal and Romania, sending temperatures soaring over 100 degrees F. Eastern Australia experienced one of its worst heat waves ever in February with temperatures topping 113 degrees.

Over 1,800 deaths were blamed on floods brought by heavy monsoon rains in India, Nepal and Bangladesh. Flooding in northeast India and Bangladesh was the worst in more than a decade. In eastern and southern China, heavy rains during June and July produced severe flooding and landslides that affected more than 100 million people and were blamed for more than 1,000 deaths nationwide.

In November, Munich Re - one of the world's largest reinsurance companies - estimated global economic losses from natural disasters in the first 10 months of 2004 at $90 billion, compared to an average of $70 billion a year in the previous decade. With the addition of the Indian Ocean tsunamis, losses are expected top $100 billion. The majority of economic losses in developing countries are not insured.

Scientists point out that global warming may exacerbate some natural disasters, although none is directly caused by climate change. Warming can cause sea levels to rise and erode coasts, and that may increase damage from hurricane storm surges and tsunamis, as well as the intensity of hurricane winds.

Globally, 2004 was the fourth warmest year on record, according to the World Meteorological Organization. Of the 10 warmest years since record keeping began in 1861, nine have occurred since 1995. The 1990s was the warmest decade on record.

A United Nations study released this year said that while the annual cost of natural disasters rose significantly between 1993 and 2002, the number of deaths has been declining, thanks largely to early warning systems for hurricanes, typhoons and cyclones.

The worst disaster of the last 30 years in terms of fatalities was a 1976 earthquake in China that officially killed 242,000 people, but which experts believe killed as many 750,000.

Brian Tucker, president of GeoHazards International, which researches earthquake safety, said he fears that growth of "megacities" with populations of more than 10 million people in earthquake-prone regions means there will eventually be an earthquake that kills more 1 million people.

"I think it would be too simple to say that natural disasters in developing countries are killing fewer and fewer people," Tucker said. "I think you have to dig deeper into the region and the type of natural phenomenon."

On the Net: www.noaa.gov/index.html

(E-mail Joan Lowy at LowyJ(at)shns.com.)


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: disasters; locusts; tsunami

1 posted on 01/04/2005 10:35:32 AM PST by Destro
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To: Destro

http://www.thetalentshow.org/images/kerry-flower.jpg


2 posted on 01/04/2005 10:41:37 AM PST by BenLurkin (Big government is still a big problem.)
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To: Destro

Another article that doesn't say much of anything we don't already know. The idea that somehow natural disasters are becoming more common is just bunk. Nothing that occurred last year hasn't occurred before many many times.

Its main purpose I think was to somehow associate weather phenomena with global warming, a madcap theory which has already been debunked.


3 posted on 01/04/2005 10:41:50 AM PST by eleni121 (4 more years and then 4 more again)
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To: eleni121

Global warming has zero to do with earthquakes. Maybe Jesus is returning?


4 posted on 01/04/2005 10:43:07 AM PST by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorism by visiting johnathangaltfilms.com and jihadwatch.org)
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To: Destro

Things will have to get much worse before that happens Destro.

But here I am trying hard to live as though it could be...


5 posted on 01/04/2005 10:48:26 AM PST by eleni121 (4 more years and then 4 more again)
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To: eleni121

Oh well - the rapture will skip me I gather :)


6 posted on 01/04/2005 10:49:56 AM PST by Destro (Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorism by visiting johnathangaltfilms.com and jihadwatch.org)
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To: Destro

I expected the re-election of W to be in this list somewhere...


7 posted on 01/04/2005 11:16:22 AM PST by grobdriver (Let the embeds check the bodies!)
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To: eleni121
"Another article that doesn't say much of anything we don't already know. The idea that somehow natural disasters are becoming more common is just bunk. Nothing that occurred last year hasn't occurred before many many times."

I agree the whole thing is a bunch of garbage.
The difference is the communication and technology.
Both are making it easier to identify and communicate disasters.
20 years ago we did not have all the 24 hour news networks that had to fill time. Now we do. Nothing has been happening the last two weeks so we are getting the Tsunami story to nausea. Just like the Hurricane stories last fall.

60 years ago we had no way of detecting earthquakes, tidal waves, Hurricane's, tornadoes, and everything else.
It does not mean they did not happen. It just means they were never reported and thus never were made record.

I am so sick of the no-it-all eggheads who run around and act like the earth is doing something new.

Remember these are the types that will tell you that they don't believe in God because their is no proof of his existence.

But they will also tell you Global Warming is happening, but when you ask for proof, they will tell you they don't need any.

Whatever.
8 posted on 01/04/2005 11:21:37 AM PST by t-1000 (Hecho...Lava Sus Manos?)
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To: Destro
meowmeow recommends:

The chronological progression through the centuries, marked by selective annotations dealing with every imaginable catastrophe, will leave readers breathless. There is a short selective bibliography and a lengthy timeline of events recording air crashes, assassinations, battles, earthquakes, epidemics, and famines.

9 posted on 01/04/2005 11:57:22 AM PST by meowmeow (We are all Buckhead!)
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To: t-1000

Agreed.

There is no man made global warming. Anyone who calims this is hysterical.


http://www.junkscience.com/news/robinson.htm

http://www.enterstageright.com/archive/articles/1204/1204nomanmade.htm


10 posted on 01/04/2005 12:22:54 PM PST by eleni121 (4 more years and then 4 more again)
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To: eleni121

The planet, the weather patterns,(course of the jetstream), the boundaries of the plates, are all changing, as they have constantly throughout time. Most reactions by the public are based on a limited knowledge of the changes over the Earth over a longer duration than just 'this year'.

Ask most people if there was an Earthquake and 20-30,000 people that died, in recent time, and they will say no.
Fact is, it happened almost exactly one year ago. (The BAM earthquake)

Most base their fear of global warming/cooling on the fact the weather is different than it was this summer.

The question is not why the Earth is changing, the question is CAN WE ADAPT, or will we go the way of the dinosaurs.

Also, were there stupid dinosaurs and smart ones, like there are stupid people and smart people?


11 posted on 01/04/2005 4:13:25 PM PST by UCANSEE2 (>The government of our country was meant to be a servant of the people, not a master.)
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