Friday, 6 February 2026

"Empirical evidence of declining global vulnerability to climate-related hazards" | Global Environmental Change

Deaths per thousand, within a 400km 
radius of the centre of the weather event

Highlights
• We quantified the dynamics of socio-economic vulnerability to climate-related hazards.
• A decreasing trend in both human and economic vulnerability is evident.
• Global average mortality and loss rates have dropped by 6.5 and nearly 5 times, respectively, from 1980 to 1989 to 2007–2016.
• Results also show a clear negative relation between vulnerability and wealth.

ADDED: Relevant to the post immediately before this, below

This puts paid the idea that "we are going to witness climate catastrophes across the world, unless we decarbonise immediately and drastically". 

Because the major drops in fatalities across the world have happened even as we have continued to pump Co2 into the atmosphere. 

Not to say we shouldn't be worried about pumping ever more Co2 into the atmosphere. But we are trying to reduce emissions. 

The point of this post and of linking to the above study, is that even if we do not manage to meaningfully reduce emissions we do not seem to be in for any sort of catastrophe in terms of people killed in "extreme weather events". 

We are getting better and better at handling them. We know that if we get richer, we get even better at doing so; therefore the aim ought to be to enrich poor countries, not stifle their growth by making them adhere to Net Zero carbon emission pathways. 

There are many more graphs and charts at the site of the paper: