AI Article Synopsis

  • Disaster losses are increasing due to climate change, leading to more extreme natural events, but local urbanization patterns significantly influence people's vulnerability to these shocks.
  • Since 1985, global human settlements, especially in East Asia, are expanding rapidly into flood-prone areas, with high-hazard settlements growing 60% faster than safe zones.
  • Many countries are not adapting to these risks and are instead increasing their exposure to climate-related disasters.

Article Abstract

Disaster losses are increasing and evidence is mounting that climate change is driving up the probability of extreme natural shocks. Yet it has also proved politically expedient to invoke climate change as an exogenous force that supposedly places disasters beyond the influence of local and national authorities. However, locally determined patterns of urbanization and spatial development are key factors to the exposure and vulnerability of people to climatic shocks. Using high-resolution annual data, this study shows that, since 1985, human settlements around the world-from villages to megacities-have expanded continuously and rapidly into present-day flood zones. In many regions, growth in the most hazardous flood zones is outpacing growth in non-exposed zones by a large margin, particularly in East Asia, where high-hazard settlements have expanded 60% faster than flood-safe settlements. These results provide systematic evidence of a divergence in the exposure of countries to flood hazards. Instead of adapting their exposure, many countries continue to actively amplify their exposure to increasingly frequent climatic shocks.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-023-06468-9DOI Listing

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