Warm ocean waters, low-lying coasts, and poverty help explain what makes disasters like Super Typhoon Haiyan dangerous in the Philippines
The unofficial death
toll for Super Typhoon Haiyan is expected to exceed 10,000 people in the
Philippines, but the country is no stranger to catastrophic natural disasters. From
earthquakes to volcanic eruptions to previous super typhoons, death tolls
following cataclysmic events in the Philippines tend to be high. Here are 5
reasons why:
1. Warm Ocean Waters
Located just above the equator, the Philippines faces the
western Pacific without much else in the way to take the force of storms before
they make landfall. Those warm, equatorial waters power storms, about 20
typhoons a year. (See related, “Typhoon,
Hurricane, Cyclone: What's the Difference?”)
"It has the warmest ocean temperatures in the world. We
call it the warm pool around Indonesia and the Philippines," says
atmospheric scientist Colin Price of Israel's Tel Aviv University.
"You need temperatures above 28°C (82.4°F) for typhoons
to form. In the western Pacific, the water's normally above 28 degrees,"
Price says. (Related: "Rising
Temperatures May Cause More Katrinas.")
2. Coastal Homes
A lot of people live on low-lying coastal islands in the
Philippines, with more than 60 percent of the population living in coastal
zones, according
to World Bank estimates.
Storm surges for landfall of Super Typhoon Haiyan reached 23
feet (7 meters) in some places and were more than 16 feet (5 meters) high.
Those waves rolled over low-lying parts of populated islands
such as Leyte, home to the coastal city of Tacloban, where the BBC estimates
more than 10,000 people alone died.
3. Deforestation
In past typhoons, mudslides have killed many storm survivors
in the Philippines, notes meteorologist Jeff Masters of the Weather
Underground website.
Hillsides denuded of trees have fewer roots to hold them
together, which can lead to mudslides when they are hit by sudden huge
outbursts of rain.
Deforestation has caused similar problems in places
such as Haiti, where mudslides were triggered by rainstorms. The soil
clogged waterways, causing stagnation later linked
to cholera outbreaks.
4. Ring of Fire
On top of everything else, the Philippines rests on the
Pacific’s earthquake and volcano Ring of Fire.
Driven by the Pacific's Ocean's crust diving underneath the
continents, the result is earthquakes and tsunamis striking the Philippines
with regularity. A magnitude
7.2 earthquake last month killed 222 people, for example, on the island
province of Bohol.
5. Underdevelopment
The young, poor population of the Philippines has
increasingly shifted to coastal regions, where rapidly constructed housing and
inadequate evacuation plans may have played a role in the Haiyan disaster.
Indeed, reports
are now emerging that people died in shelters too weak to withstand the
storm surge and high winds of the super typhoon.
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