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#naturalcatastrophes — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #naturalcatastrophes, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Bus sinks into the River Seine near Paris after nightmare lesson for trainee driver

    Your support helps us to tell the story From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The…
    #France #FR #Europe #EU #Paris #Accidents #Disasters #NaturalCatastrophes
    europesays.com/france/10525/

  2. EU‑wide risk‑sharing framework to help address nat cat insurance protection gap: Morningstar DBRS

    The European Insurance and Occupational Pensions Authority (EIOPA) and the European Stability Mechanism (ESM), have announced a proposal…
    #Europe #EU #DBRSMorningstar #EuropeanUnion #ILS #natcat #naturalcatastrophes #protectiongap
    europesays.com/europe/14422/

  3. “Now, the world is reaping the consequences of that change. In the last decade, the frequency of global #NaturalCatastrophes jumped by 28 percent. On a single day in July 2023, 60 percent of the US population faced an #ExtremeWeather alert. Costs have catapulted too: since 1970, losses from disasters increased an average of 5 percent a year, particularly in the United States.”

  4. “Now, the world is reaping the consequences of that change. In the last decade, the frequency of global #NaturalCatastrophes jumped by 28 percent. On a single day in July 2023, 60 percent of the US population faced an #ExtremeWeather alert. Costs have catapulted too: since 1970, losses from disasters increased an average of 5 percent a year, particularly in the United States.”

  5. “Now, the world is reaping the consequences of that change. In the last decade, the frequency of global #NaturalCatastrophes jumped by 28 percent. On a single day in July 2023, 60 percent of the US population faced an #ExtremeWeather alert. Costs have catapulted too: since 1970, losses from disasters increased an average of 5 percent a year, particularly in the United States.”

  6. “Now, the world is reaping the consequences of that change. In the last decade, the frequency of global #NaturalCatastrophes jumped by 28 percent. On a single day in July 2023, 60 percent of the US population faced an #ExtremeWeather alert. Costs have catapulted too: since 1970, losses from disasters increased an average of 5 percent a year, particularly in the United States.”

  7. “Now, the world is reaping the consequences of that change. In the last decade, the frequency of global #NaturalCatastrophes jumped by 28 percent. On a single day in July 2023, 60 percent of the US population faced an #ExtremeWeather alert. Costs have catapulted too: since 1970, losses from disasters increased an average of 5 percent a year, particularly in the United States.”