A Recipe for Disaster:
The 2023 Türkiye Earthquakes
WEBINAR
20th November 2024 19:00 GMT
by Ekbal Hussain (British Geological Survey)
Abstract
Globally, two thirds of deaths arising from natural hazards in recent decades were caused by geological hazards. But how and why do natural hazards turn into disasters? In this talk I will explore this question through the lens of one particularly troublesome hazard: earthquakes. We will focus on general issues but make specific references to the 2023 Turkiye earthquake disaster. The death toll for a given earthquake magnitude will depend not only on geographic location, but also the social vulnerability of communities and the quality of the building stock. But these are dynamic features of evolving societies, which means earthquake risk varies in time and space. This talk will compare and contrast global trends in earthquake fatalities and aim to extract common themes that exacerbate the impact of natural hazards, and consider where and why these turn into disasters.
Biography
Ekbal Hussain is a Remote Sensing Geoscientist at the British Geological Survey. His research focuses on the use of satellite imagery to understand earth processes, particularly those related to natural hazards such as earthquakes, landslides and sand dune migration. Ekbal is an advocate for holistic multi-hazard approaches to understanding and managing the impact of disasters to society.