Disasters and Development- Investing in Sustainable Development of Nepal
Book Specification
Item Code: | AZG927 |
Author: | N.P. Bhandary and J.K. Subedi |
Publisher: | Vajra Publications, Nepal |
Language: | ENGLISH |
Edition: | 2010 |
ISBN: | 9789937506540 |
Pages: | 216 (Throughout Color Illustrations) |
Cover: | PAPERBACK |
Other Details | 9.50x7.00 inch |
Weight | 470 gm |
Book Description
Not only in earthquake-related disasters but a great number of human casualty together with massive property loss has been also reported in water-related and water-induced disasters. For example, the Hurricane Katrina that hit a large part of America in the periphery of the Gulf of Mexico in August 2005 including the deadliest flooding of New Orleans, Louisiana caused an estimated total of $1 billion US dollars of economic loss and killed nearly 2,000 people Recently in China, about 1,000 people died and about 500 were missing in flood disaster of July 2010 in Sichuan Province. Likewise, in 2007, the South Asian floods affecting India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, and Bhutan killed nearly 2,000 people and displaced more than 20 million people in the area. As a water-induced disaster, except for the case of earthquake being the inducing factor, landslides also result in heavy economic loss. Unlike earthquakes, landslides and floods are more frequent but compared to mega earthquake disasters, the amount of loss and number of human casualty is often less. Japan, for example loses 10-20 people every years in water-related and water-induced disasters including landslides. All these natural disasters somehow directly affect the national economy, and especially when a developing or underdeveloped nation is hit hard by these disasters, whole development process is affected.
The fatal loss goes very high in the Himalayan Region too, mainly in earthquakes, landslides, and floods. Due to natural causes but more due to inadequate financial capacity and immature technical capability to reduce/prevent disasters, Nepal as a major part of the Himalayan Region loses about 300 people in average annually in landslides and flood-related disasters. On the other hand, the soon-to-hit earthquake of the magnitude of the Great 1934 Earthquake has been predicted to kill more than 40,000 people in Kathmandu Valley alone.
**Contents and Sample Pages**