Martin Brook, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau
Some New Zealand universities have proposed staff and course cuts in earth sciences. This could leave the country ill prepared to deal with natural hazards and extreme weather.
A rip current flows straight out to sea.
Rob Brander
Rip currents are one of the great dangers of Australian beaches. We can learn a lot about avoiding and escaping this natural hazard by asking survivors what being caught in a rip is really like.
People search for survivors beneath the rubble in Diyarbakir, Turkey. February 6 2023.
EPA-EFE/Refik Tekin
Shane Cronin, University of Auckland, Waipapa Taumata Rau et David Dempsey, University of Canterbury
One of the lessons we must take from the Whakaari tragedy is the cumulative nature of risk. Repeated visits to the volcanic island by tour guides placed them near unacceptable risk limits.
People inspect the damage following a tsunami at a village in Sumur, Indonesia, on Dec. 24, 2018.
(AP Photo/Fauzy Chaniago)
It’s now officially the end of hurricane season, but the rebuilding of the Bahamas continues, slowed by the risks imposed by a history of colonialism and class division.
Many houses still do not have cyclone-ready roofs, so are liable to lose them if hit by the full force of the storm.
Dan Peled/AAP
Most homes are not as cyclone-ready as they could be. It seems lower insurance premiums aren’t enough of an incentive for owners to upgrade their homes, but a new study points to some solutions.
Emergency services haven’t been able to protect people and properties against increasingly intense bushfires.
Scott Davis/AAP
With heatwaves, droughts and fires all on the rise, the federal government is urged to merge its separate strategies on disaster resilience and climate readiness.