Meeting the Challenges of Natural Hazards

Adopted by Council December 1996
Revised and reaffirmed December 2000
Reaffirmed December 2004 and December 2005
Revised and Reaffirmed December 2007

Natural disasters in 2004 and 2005, including the Sumatra earthquake and tsunami, Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, and Wilma, and the Kashmir earthquake, provided dramatic evidence of the hazards posed to the global community by the forces of Nature. Responsible for more than 350,000 deaths and combined economic losses on the order of US$300 billion, those powerful events ranked among the most deadly and costly disasters of the past 100 years.

According to UN sources, in 2008, for the first time, more people will live in cities than in rural areas. This global trend toward urbanization concentrates millions into dense megacities, many of which are vulnerable to natural hazards. Coastal communities are becoming more vulnerable due to increasing development, the destruction of natural defenses such as wetlands and sand dunes, and the growing risk associated with human influences on the Earth system, such as sea level rise. In megacities exposed to seismic hazards, inappropriate land-use and construction practices, along with population pressures, are also increasing vulnerability.

Increased scientific understanding of meteorological hazards is saving lives worldwide and mitigating catastrophe through short-term storm forecasting made possible by real-time data acquisition and high-performance computer modeling. However, other natural hazards such as earthquakes, landslides, space weather and even comet or asteroid impact often occur without warning despite current scientific understanding of their cause and behavior.

To respond to the challenges posed by natural hazards, Earth and space scientists and engineers must:

Governments and businesses can help scientists meet these challenges through investments in:



Permissions: Members everywhere are encouraged to help inform the policy making process in their home locales with thoughtful presentation of scientific viewpoints. Council adoption of position statements is one way that the Union can assist in this process. Any member may use an AGU policy statement in discussions with local or national policy makers as an official statement of the Union. If you use excerpts from a statement, then you should not attribute those as a Union position. Societies anywhere may use an AGU position statement with or without attribution as a basis for developing their own statements.


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