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EM-DAT: Disasters of the week

Week 13-2023: March 27 - April 02
Natural disasters:

2023-0177    Landslides; Alausí Canton, Ecuador
2023-0178    Floods ; Pando department, Bolivia
2023-0187    Floods; Kenya and Ethiopia
2023-0191    Floods; Cibitoke, Burundi
2023-0192    Tornadoes; USA
2023-0193    Landslides; North Kivu, Congo (Dem rep)
2023-0194    Wildfires; Korea (Rep of)
2023-0197    Wildfires and pollution; Mekong region, Thailand
2023-0198    Severe weather; Odisha, India
2023-0199    Flash floods; Jiroft County, Kerman province, Iran (Islam Rep)
2023-0200    Floods; Cauca department, Colombia
2023-0202    Marbourg outbreak; Kagera region, Tanzania (United Republic of)
2023-0203    Floods; Cerea state, Brazil
2023-0207    Flash Floods; Taita–Taveta and Narok Counties, Kenya
2023-0209    Flash Floods; Mindanao, Philippines
2023-0210    Storm ‘Mathis’; Switzerland, France and Germany
2023-0211    Floods; Indonesia
2023-0212    Floods; Latvia and Belarus

Technological disasters:

2023-0182    Fire in an immigration processing facility; Ciudad Juarez, Mexico
2023-0184    Road accidents; Asir, Saudi Arabia
2023-0188    Fire on a ferry; Baluk-Baluk IsL, Philippines
2023-0190    Stampede; Karachi, Pakistan
2023-0195    Collapse in a temple; Madhya Pradesh, India
2023-0196    Minibus accident; near Rabat, Morocco

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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