If you rely on today’s headlines, you would be forgiven for believing that extreme weather is becoming ever more deadly and that humanity is steadily losing its ability to cope. Floods, storms, and heat waves are routinely framed as evidence of a growing “climate emergency,” often accompanied by claims that climate change is “juicing” weather extremes and driving escalating loss of life. Yet when we step back from the headlines and examine the long-term data, a very different and far more encouraging picture emerges with a new peer-reviewed study just published Empirical evidence of declining global vulnerability to climate-related hazards by Giuseppe Formetta and Luc Feyen. They write:
“The most striking feature of modern climate history is not worsening vulnerability, but a dramatic collapse in weather-related mortality.”
Over the past century—and especially since the mid-20th century—the risk of dying from extreme weather has fallen dramatically. This is not a matter of interpretation or projection. It is documented in global disaster databases and confirmed by peer-reviewed research. This new research bolsters what the “Or World in Data” graph shows, seen below.

Data compiled by the Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED) and summarized by Our World in Data show that global death rates from weather-related disasters have dropped by roughly two orders of magnitude since the 1960s . In 1960, extreme weather events killed more than 300 people per 100,000 worldwide. By 1970, that figure had already fallen below 100. By 1990, it was closer to one or two per 100,000. In recent years—particularly since about 2014—global death rates from storms, floods, and wind-related disasters have routinely fallen below one per 100,000 people.
“Extreme weather still happens. What has changed is its ability to kill.”
This decline has occurred during a period when the world’s population more than doubled, when coastal development expanded rapidly, and when the total value of infrastructure and assets exposed to weather hazards increased many times over. If extreme weather were becoming more dangerous in the way commonly suggested, mortality risk should have increased alongside that exposure. Instead, it collapsed.
A common response is to dismiss these figures as artifacts of population growth or improved reporting. That objection fails once vulnerability is analyzed properly. Rather than looking at raw death counts, which are easily distorted, researchers increasingly examine mortality rates relative to the number of people actually exposed to hazardous events. When that is done, the downward trend becomes even clearer.
The comprehensive peer-reviewed study published in Global Environmental Change by Giuseppe Formetta and Luc Feyen examined global vulnerability to climate-related hazards from 1980 to 2016 using one of the most complete disaster loss databases available . The authors calculated mortality rates as a function of exposed population and economic loss rates as a function of exposed GDP, allowing them to separate changes in vulnerability from changes in population, wealth, and reporting practices.
“When deaths are normalized to exposure, vulnerability to extreme weather has fallen sharply across the globe.”
Their results were striking. Across seven major weather-related hazard types, global mortality rates fell by more than a factor of six between the 1980s and the most recent decade analyzed. Economic loss rates, when normalized to exposed GDP, declined by nearly a factor of five. These results were robust across different assumptions about the size of affected areas and were observed for floods, wind storms, drought-related hazards, and other major categories.

This matters because it directly challenges one of the core assumptions embedded in many climate-impact narratives: that increasing hazard intensity automatically translates into increasing human harm. The real-world data show that this assumption is wrong. Vulnerability is not fixed. It changes, often rapidly, in response to development, technology, and institutional capacity.
Meanwhile, the count of weather related incidents increased:

One of the clearest findings in the Formetta and Feyen study is the strong negative relationship between wealth and vulnerability. As countries become wealthier, mortality rates fall. The steepest declines occur at low income levels, where even modest improvements—basic infrastructure, early warning systems, communications, and emergency response—produce large reductions in loss of life.
This dynamic has led to a convergence in vulnerability between poorer and richer countries over time. While significant gaps remain for certain hazards, particularly coastal flooding and wind-related events, poorer countries today are far less vulnerable than they were just a few decades ago, and in many cases they have reduced vulnerability faster than wealthier nations.
“Development, not decarbonization, has been the dominant life-saving force.”
This reality is rarely reflected in how disaster losses are discussed publicly. Rising economic damages are often cited as evidence that extreme weather is becoming more destructive. What is almost never mentioned is that these figures are reported in absolute terms. As societies grow wealthier, they place more valuable assets in harm’s way. A flood that once damaged crops may now inundate industrial parks, ports, and dense urban infrastructure. Dollar losses rise even if risk declines.
When losses are normalized to the amount of wealth exposed, the trend reverses. Proportional losses are falling, not rising. This distinction is central to understanding risk, yet it is almost entirely absent from mainstream reporting.
“Higher losses do not mean higher danger. They usually mean more wealth in the path of nature.”
The focus on absolute losses and isolated disasters feeds directly into worst-case climate narratives. Many climate-impact models implicitly assume fixed vulnerability or slow adaptation, treating societies as passive victims rather than adaptive systems. The historical record shows otherwise. Adaptation is not speculative; it is measurable, ongoing, and already responsible for enormous reductions in mortality.
Formetta and Feyen explicitly note that improved protection measures, early warning systems, and disaster risk management have counterbalanced increases in exposure, resulting in net reductions in both human and economic vulnerability . This is not a footnote. It is a central conclusion of their analysis.
“Adaptation has outpaced hazard—not the other way around.”
Yet this evidence sits uneasily alongside policy narratives that frame emissions reductions as the primary means of protecting lives from extreme weather. Emissions policy may be debated on many grounds, but the historical record is clear: reduced vulnerability has been driven overwhelmingly by wealth, technology, and governance, not by climate mitigation.
This matters because policies that restrict economic growth or limit access to affordable energy risk undermining the very factors that have proven most effective at saving lives. Making societies poorer in the name of climate protection is more likely to increase disaster risk than reduce it.
None of this implies that extreme weather is harmless or that preparation is unnecessary. Large loss-of-life events can still occur, particularly where infrastructure is weak or governance fails. The data show variability, and tragic outliers remain possible.
What the data do not show is an escalating global mortality crisis driven by climate change. The dominant long-term trend is one of extraordinary progress.
“The real story of extreme weather is not one of failure, but of resilience.”
There are limitations, of course. Disaster databases are imperfect, particularly in earlier decades, and some hazards—especially extreme temperature events—are difficult to track consistently over time. Formetta and Feyen are explicit about these uncertainties and deliberately avoid mixing incompatible datasets. That methodological caution stands in sharp contrast to the confidence often placed in long-range model projections.
Taken together, the evidence leads to a clear conclusion. Extreme weather remains a fact of life, but its capacity to kill has been dramatically reduced because human societies have become better prepared, better informed, and more resilient.
That is the real good news. It deserves far more attention than it receives. If you are a journalist covering extreme weather, there is a basic question worth asking before publishing the next “climate-fueled disaster” headline: Are people actually becoming more likely to die from these events?
The long-term data say no.
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The minor little problem is that The Green Blob wishes to keep peasant scum poor. They must keep the lumpenproletariat in their place.
Where I live the weather is temperate. We have four seasons, but none of them are extreme. Occasionally we get big storms in winter but never “Biblical”. We get infrequent heat waves in summer, but they’re really minor. Some people live in truly extreme places, like Australians or Canadians, but most of us don’t for good reason.
Power hungry fear merchants push doom scenarios to exploit the masses. That’s the catastrophe. Count the deaths from war and tyranny. They are legion.
I recently read that Mao killed 60 million of his own people. And he once said he wasn’t afraid of a nuclear war with Russia as “we have too many people anyway”.
Mao was asked about all the deaths and replied that they were going to die anyways.
by the way, a very interesting read is “On China” by Kissinger- it’s only about a thousand pages 🙂
I’ve always like that word “lumpenproletariat”. Such a put down by elites. Like the German “untermenschen”.
I was once quite interested in Futurama ! But you get to an age, when the future’s heading your way like an express-train…
Bender was the real star.
Death to all Humans, meatbag!
Exactly, and by now we’ve seen way too many people take that train going the other way into the fog.
If you rely on today’s headlines
You need serious help, and I wouldn’t recommend a psychiatrist or psychologist etc. They are usually even more daffy than their clients are.
Are Psychiatrists More Mad Than Their Patients?
This question is not a joke. It has come up repeatedly when I discuss how absurdly harmful mainstream psychiatry is… – Mad in America
Which is where educashun and the media – ie BBC – come in…
Children and young people are at heightened risk from the mental health and wellbeing impacts of climate change but there are ways to support them. – gov.uk
Whatever you call it, eco-anxiety, eco-paralysis, eco-grief or eco-anger, the impact of the awareness of climate crises on people’s mental health and emotional wellbeing is increasingly being felt, particularly by children and young people (Clayton & Karazsia, 2020). – British Psychological Society
IPCRESS in action. No, it isn’t just a Len Deighton novel. It is the “Induction of Psychoneuroses by Conditioned Reflex Under Stress”. And the school environment is perfect for that.
https://eos.org/articles/jet-propulsion-laboratory-reopens-as-fire-recovery-continues
Excellent study, but for those of us that read beyond the headlines, this isn’t new or surprising whatsoever.
But good to pass along to the unenlightened.
The use of fossil fuels has allowed humanity to survive extreme weather.
Now, just have to enforce building codes in hurricane prone zones so property damage makes a similar drop.
Hurricanes cause damage?
I thought “wind was free”? /sarc
On the extreme weather topic…you won’t get this from CoveringClimateNow.rag
https://calgaryherald.com/opinion/canadas-coldest-temperature-in-50-years/wcm/403088e4-6442-4b2f-9e1b-fa7fa523a51f
This seems to be from Braeburn Lodge at 61.48°N Lat.
This is near the place about which Robert Service wrote the poem
“The Cremation of Sam McGee {1907}
“Was that night on the marge of Lake Lebarge
I cremated Sam McGee“
Extreme Weather Isn’t Getting Deadlier
Well, that’s not good news !
How will we scare people into behaving as required ?
We’ve tried Ozone holes, Sea Rising, Polar Bears, Glaciers melting, Food shortage, Boiling seas & fish, simultaneous Droughts & flooding, the end of Coffee & 1,000s of similar dire consequences, but none were so effective as ‘Extreme Weather’.
Now you’ve taken that away, we’ll have to go back to religion, with a 24/7 all-seeing god, who judges every thought; angels, devils, fiery furnaces (powered by hydrogen & fitted with carbon capture), inquisitions etc.
It worked for centuries; it might work again ??
TIP
Wind has gone away in the Pacific Northwest. Check the chart here:
BPA Balancing Authority Load and Total VER
Wind is the VER (green line) at the bottom of the line chart.
The National Weather Service expects this to continue for, at least,
another 4 days (near Goldendale, WA). Puget sound may get wind Sunday, but that is not where the wind facilities are. Sky cover has been 80% +/- and continues, although there isn’t much solar in the region.
Wind facilities typically do not get paid when there is no wind, as they generate electricity only when the wind is blowing. However, they may receive payments for being available to produce power when none is needed. This is a murky part.
When one of these Pacific Northwest dumkopflauta windless periods begin, I download the BPA’s graph every day. If a PNW dumkopflauta lasts for more than ten days, I then load the individual PNG files into a single graphical illustration of the dumkopflauta period for further use here and elsewhere.
“This is a murky part”
Here on the other side of the pond the Seagreen offshore wind farm had been paid £104m for generating and £262m for curtailing by the end of 2024. In that year 3.3TWhs of the 4.4TWhs it generated were discarded!
Washington is the only state that went further left in 2024. They’ve continued that idiocy electing pro-crime anti business candidates in Seattle. Some of the highest gas prices in the nation due to carbon taxes that voters rejected twice. Hard to fathom the level of abject ignorance embraced by the brainwashed there.
Sadly, the reality of long term weather trends is that it is the over 50s who are most likely to discern the truth in the face of media misdirection/misinformation/lying, since they have personal experience of weather events/sequences which directly contradict the false media narrative being peddled.
A few years back now, the Mayor of London, Sadiq Khan (whose ancestors came from a part of the world where -20C was not going to occur) came out with some nonsense about a few cm of snow coming on a north wind was ‘extreme climate’ for London. I entitled an email to the editor of a UK national newspaper with the following first four words: ‘Mincing Wimp Sadiq Khan…’
What I said was quite simple:
‘I remember December 1981, when the whole of the Thames Valley was covered in snow, when night-time temperatures dropped to around -18C (and coincidentally around the same time the Scottish village of Braemar recorded the lowest ever temperature in the UK since records began).’
So unless and until weather conditions mirrored a month of my teenage years, I wasn’t going to have some pandering mayor coming out with lying claptrap.
My generation (those born in the early 1960s) were also aware that snow was a very rare event in 1970s NW London. Snow fell precisely once between January 1971 and November 1979. Not something that BBC climate doomsters want to publicise. But true, nonetheless.
We also experienced the long, hot dry summer of 1976, when most of Western Europe was taking precautions against drought.
I lived in a townhouse in Oxford in the 1990s that actually swayed a bit when a hurricane passed over. This was one of those moments that sleeping four storeys up became an optional extra in life. As it happened, the building survived….
So I say to all those over the age of 50: bring your lived experiences to bear when stories about climate are being peddled. We have our lived experiences to pass down and we won’t have 30 year old media numpties tell us otherwise….
List of heat waves – Wikipedia
The one in 1955 – I was in western Pennsylvania — was intense.
I was eleven. I stayed for a week with cousins. The place had an outhouse and no AC.
Very nice.
Machines powered by fossil fuel make dams and dikes to protect people – voters in part of western North Carolina rejected flood control dams in their area whereas many were built to the north. So when a hurricane veered to the west after coming up from the Gulf as does happen flooding occurred. (And people were building higher up slopes.)
Concrete is used to make dams and shelters – such as Bangladesh’s many concrete shelters that people can move up and inland to when a cyclone is coming. But oh! making cement creates carbon emissions! 😉
Machines powered by fossil fuels move people out of harms way or bring aid to them.
Empirical evidence of declining global vulnerability to climate-related hazards
Highlights
Empirical evidence of declining global vulnerability to climate-related hazards – ScienceDirect
Unfortunately, the brainwashed are incapable of understanding how badly they have been lied to about extreme weather. A perfectly normal feature of climate has been weaponized as fear porn.