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Data InsightsBangladesh has become much more resilient to cyclones, saving many lives

Bangladesh has become much more resilient to cyclones, saving many lives

This data visualization presents a bar graph illustrating the number of deaths in Bangladesh from storm events over the years, prominently featuring significant cyclone incidents. The vertical axis represents the number of deaths, ranging from 0 to over 300,000, while the horizontal axis spans from 1960 to 2023.

Key data points highlighted include:

- More than 300,000 deaths noted during the 1970 Bhola cyclone, categorized as a Category 3 cyclone.
- In 1991, 138,000 deaths occurred from a Category 4 cyclone.
- In 1985, 15,000 deaths were reported from a Category 3 cyclone.
- The year 2007 saw only 4,000 deaths from a Category 4 cyclone.
- Since 2007, no year has recorded more than 200 deaths, even with several Category 4 and 5 cyclones.

A note emphasizes that estimates before 1971 are based on deaths that occurred within Bangladesh's current borders. The data sources for the graph are EM-DAT, CRED, and UCLouvain, from the year 2024. The image is attrib uted to the "Our World in Data" project.

In 1970, Cyclone Bhola hit Bangladesh, killing more than 300,000 people. It was a strong cyclone, but not unprecedented. What made it so deadly was the lack of any early detection systems, alarms, or mass evacuation procedures. A huge storm surged into a densely populated area, and hundreds of thousands of people drowned in their homes.

Since then, Bangladesh has become much more resilient to these events. The chart shows the country's annual death toll from storms, stretching back to 1960.

Throughout the 1980s and early 1990s, a few large events claimed many lives. But in recent decades, the death toll has been low. That’s despite Bangladesh experiencing some extremely powerful cyclones. Cyclone Amphan (2020) and Mocha (2023) were both Category 5 — the strongest rating.

Bangladesh offers one of the clearest examples of how humans are not helpless in the face of “natural” disasters: investments in weather forecasting, early warning systems, and proper evacuation procedures can protect communities and save lives.

This development is part of a longer-term and widespread success in reducing humanity’s vulnerability to storms, floods, earthquakes, and other hazards. Read more in my article.

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