The ten costliest weather disasters of 2021 topped $ 170 billion in damage in total.
The ten disasters also killed at least 1,075 people and displaced more than 1.3 million people, according to Christian Aid's annual report released on Monday.
Last year, the amount of economic damage from the ten most costly weather events was calculated at nearly $ 150 billion by the NGO, which points out that most assessments "are based solely on insured damage, which suggests even higher real costs ”.
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This economic classification over-represents the disasters that have occurred in rich countries, with more developed and better insured infrastructures, but the NGO recalls that “some of the most devastating extreme weather events of 2021 have struck poor countries, which have contributed little to causes of climate change ”and where most of the damage is uninsured.
Storm Ida is the costliest
In South Sudan, floods, the economic cost of which could not be assessed, affected some 800,000 people, for example Christian Aid recalls.
The costliest disaster was Storm Ida (late August-early September), which notably led to flooding in New York City, with estimated economic costs of $ 65 billion.
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Then come the July floods in Germany, Belgium and neighboring countries, with $ 43 billion in losses, then the winter storm Uri in the United States, with a cold snap as far as Texas, which notably affected the power grid and caused 23 billion damage.
A fourth disaster exceeds $ 10 billion in damage, flooding China's Henan Province in July at a cost of $ 17.6 billion.
Follow the floods in British Columbia in Canada (November, 7.5 billion), the late April cold snap in France (5.6 billion), which devastated prestigious vineyards, Cyclone Yaas in India and Bangladesh (May, 3 billion), Typhoon In-Fa in China (July, 2 billion), floods in Australia (March 2.1 billion) and Cyclone Tauktae in India and Sri Lanka (May, 1.5 billion) .
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In mid-December, the reinsurer Swiss Re published an overall estimate of the cost of natural disasters in 2021 around the world, estimated at some $ 250 billion, up 24% compared to 2020.
“The costs of climate change have been high this year,” commented Kat Kramer, climate manager at Christian Aid and author of the report.