Giving Compass' Take:
- Environmental News Network discusses how half of the population of the Himalayas is concentrated in areas at high risk for compound hazards like landslides, wildfires, and floods.
- How can funders support additional research into the compound hazards facing densely populated areas in the Himalayas?
- Learn about investing in disaster preparedness.
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Urbanization trends in the Himalaya are exposing more people to risk from compound hazards such as flooding, landslides and wildfires, a new study published in the journal Science of the Total Environment has found.
The study by a global team of researchers led by Jack Rusk ’22 MEM/ MArch and published in the journal Science of the Total Environment found that only a small proportion of the Himalaya region is susceptible to these compounding threats from multiple hazards, yet almost half of the region’s population is concentrated in those high-risk areas.
These compound hazards, which are events where more than one hazard interact and cause multiplicatively destructive consequences, are increasing in likelihood from climate change, according to the latest assessment report by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change.
Read the full article about compound hazards in the Himalayas at Environmental News Network.