When calamities like the Nepal earthquake hit, people look for numbers to help calculate the toll of destruction. That puts the spotlight on operations like , which is world’s largest independent Web site for earthquake data. The site has a rapid earthquake-loss estimation model, so that within 30 minutes of an event, anywhere in the world, they can offer a prediction about fatalities and economic loss. The U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) also has a Web site; the models differ in how they determine an event’s impact, the economic inputs used and the databases they draw from. Earthquake-report.com has a narrower estimate of deaths, up to 10,000, whereas the USGS gives a much broader spread, estimating that between 10,000 and 100,000 fatalities are most likely.
What were you expecting when you heard of the event, prior to running your first analysis?
At the moment, our models have a median of around 8,000 to 9,000 deaths, with 10,000 not out of the question. The latest official death toll [on Wednesday afternoon] is 6,101: 6,000 in Nepal, 25 in China, 72 in India and four in Bangladesh. Injured Nepal: 10,348. Internally displaced: 454,769. It is the ninth-deadliest of the 21st century currently—and probably will end up being the eighth-deadliest, since 1999.
Are you seeing any surprising statistics?
What are the economic losses to the region?
Tourists to Nepal often come to see temples. How many temples have been lost?
The temples were mostly unreinforced. However, one internationally funded temple had earthquake retrofitting, I don't know how the temple went and if it survived. Newer buildings in Kathmandu, however, survived the earthquake very well.
What has been the most important story coming out of Nepal for you?
Where else in the world are huge populations still at risk because they are living in cities where the primary building construction is unreinforced concrete and there is a likelihood of a major earthquake like this?
Do you think such countries will learn from this event and work to improve their own cities?
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