What's new
CRED Crunch 67 - EM-DAT : The last 25 years in research
Read our latest CRED Crunch
CRED Crunch 66 - Disasters Year in Review 2021
Read our latest CRED Crunch
Disasters in numbers 2021
CRED Crunch 65 - Technological Disasters: Trends & Transport accidents
Please read our latest CRED Crunch
CRED Crunch 64 - Extreme weather events in Europe
Please read our latest CRED Crunch
EM-DAT: Disasters of the week
Week 22-2022: May 30 - June 5
Natural disasters: 2022-0333 Cyclone ‘Agatha’; Mexico
2022-0334 Earthquake; Sichuan province, China
2022-0336 Severe weather; Sri Lanka
2022-0367 Tropical storms; Cuba
2022-0373 Severe weather; Seine-Maritime and Loi-et-Cher departments, France
2022-0374 Flash floods; Sultan Kudarat and South Cotabato Provinces, Philippines
2022-0375 Floods; Guyana
2022-0376 Floods and landslides; Costa Rica
2022-0379 Wildfires; suburb Athens, Greece
2022-0380 Earthquake; Indonesia
2022-0390 Mudslide; Jinotega department, Nicaragua
Technological disasters: 2022-0331 Shipwreck; Indonesia
2022-0372 Fire and explosion in a shipping container depot; Sitakunda, Bangladesh
2022-0389 Explosion in a coal mine; Norte de Santander, Colombia
2022-0391 Transport accident; Uttarkashi, India
Welcome to the EM-DAT website
In 1988, the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) launched the Emergency Events Database (EM-DAT). EM-DAT was created with the initial support of the World Health Organisation (WHO) and the Belgian Government.
The main objective of the database is to serve the purposes of humanitarian action at national and international levels. The initiative aims to rationalise decision making for disaster preparedness, as well as provide an objective base for vulnerability assessment and priority setting.
EM-DAT contains essential core data on the occurrence and effects of over 22,000 mass disasters in the world from 1900 to the present day. The database is compiled from various sources, including UN agencies, non-governmental organisations, insurance companies, research institutes and press agencies.
Data access policy new public EM-DAT tool
The Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) within the Université catholique de Louvain (UCLouvain) provides free access to the full Emergency Events Database (EM-DAT) for non-commercial purposes. Users on behalf of academic organizations, universities, non-profit organisations and/or international public organization (UN agencies, multi-lateral banks, other multi-lateral institution and national governments), are granted free access to EM-DAT, after acceptance of the present conditions of use.
Users representing an entity with a Commercial use, e.g. corporations, private companies, commercial partnerships, or other business organizations, must contact EM-DAT database manager (regina.below@uclouvain.be) regarding access. Access shall be granted to EM-DAT upon proof of payment of the corresponding annual fee, as agreed upon in the Database License Agreement.
Visit https://public.emdat.be/ to register and access our new public EM-DAT query tool.
Contact regina.below@uclouvain.be or contact@cred.be for more information.
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