Intense climate-related disasters—floods, storms, droughts, and heat
waves—have been on the rise worldwide. At the same time and coupled with
an increasing concentration of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere,
temperatures, on average, have been rising, and are becoming more variable
and more extreme. Rainfall has also been more variable and more extreme.
Is there an ominous link between the global increase of these
hydrometeorological and climatological events on the one side and
anthropogenic climate change on the other? This paper considers three main
disaster risk factors—rising population exposure, greater population
vulnerability, and increasing climate-related hazards—behind the increased
frequency of intense climate-related natural disasters.
In a regression analysis within a model of disaster risk determination for
1971–2013, population exposure measured by population density and
people’s vulnerability measured by socioeconomic variables are positively
linked to the frequency of these intense disasters. Importantly, the results
show that precipitation deviations are positively related to
hydrometeorological events, while temperature and precipitation deviations
have a negative association with climatological events. Moreover, global
climate change indicators show positive and highly significant effects.
Along with the scientific association between greenhouse gases and the
changes in the climate, the findings in this paper suggest a connection
between the increasing number of natural disasters and man-made
emissions of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. The implication is that
climate mitigation and climate adaptation should form part of actions for
disaster risk reduction