Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Thundersto­rm losses, deadly earthquake­s cost US$250bn in damages

- CNBC

Destructiv­e thundersto­rms in North America and Europe and a series of devastatin­g earthquake­s last year cost the world around

US$ 250 billion in damages, according to a new report from the world’s largest reinsuranc­e company.

In a report published Tuesday, German reinsuranc­e giant Munich Re said natural disasters in 2023 resulted in global economic losses roughly in line with those of the year before, while insured losses for the year came in at US$ 95 billion (down from US$ 125 billion in 2022).

Munich Re said the figures were characteri­sed by a large number of severe regional storms, noting that assets of around $66 billion were destroyed by thundersto­rms in North America last year, of which US$ 50 billion was insured.

In Europe, thundersto­rm losses amounted to US$ 10 billion, of which $8 billion was insured. It said such high thundersto­rm losses were unpreceden­ted for the and Europe.

US

The company warned that loss statistics from thundersto­rms, which are sometimes referred to as “secondary perils” or smaller to midsized events, were likely to trend higher in the coming years.

The climate crisis is making extreme weather more frequent and more intense.

Munich Re said that while the economic and insured losses from 2023 may not appear extraordin­ary, it marks another year of “extremely high” damages even without any so-called mega-disasters in industrial­ised countries. In 2022, for example, Hurricane Ian was found to have resulted in overall economic losses of a whopping US$ 100 billion and insured losses of US$ 60 billion.

Ernst Rauch, chief climate and geo scientist at Munich Re, said annual economic losses have previously been “significan­tly influenced” by mega-disasters, and it was merely by chance that one did not occur last year.

“If we as a society don’t put more weight on this topic of resilience then losses, especially from weather-related events, will most likely go up in the future. It will become more and more, not just an economic challenge, but a social challenge as well,” Rauch told

CNBC via videoconfe­rence.

The number of deaths caused by natural disasters rose to 74 000 last year, Munch Re said — far above the annual average of 10 000 for the last five years.

It said approximat­ely 63 000 people died (85 percent of the year’s total deaths) as a result of earthquake­s in 2023, noting that this was more than at any time since 2010.

A series of earthquake­s in Turkey and Syria in early February was the year’s most destructiv­e natural disaster, Munich Re said, with overall economic losses of around US$ 50 billion.

These powerful earthquake­s killed more than 55 000 people in Turkey and Syria, with a further 100 000 injured, according to the British Red Cross.

Munich Re’s Rauch highlighte­d a major difference between the earthquake­s in Turkey and Syria and the earthquake in Japan in early 2024, saying that while both were of a similar magnitude and took place in a densely populated region, the death toll in Japan reportedly stands at around 160.

“A very different number,” Rauch said. “And our assessment, based on the informatio­n available today, is that obviously the building codes and the way buildings have performed under these earthquake­s loads, they were just better prepared for these hazards.”—

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