From 1970 to 2019, natural catastrophes accounted for 50% of all disasters, 45 per cent of all recorded deaths, and 74% of all reported economic losses, according to the agencies’ Atlas of Mortality and Economic Losses from Weather, Climate, and Water Extremes.
Over 11,000 tragedies were documented worldwide as a result of these dangers, resulting in just over two million deaths and $3.64 trillion in costs. Developing countries accounted for more than 91 per cent of the deaths.
Uswitch.com/gas-electricity was intrigued by this and set out to determine which country is the most affected by global warming in terms of natural disasters. They developed a points-based index based on historical worldwide data of over 15,000 disasters from 1902 to 2021 to determine which countries are most likely to be affected by natural disasters. A total score was then calculated by using the average per cent rank across four different categories: number of people affected, fatalities, disasters and damages.
Methodology Adapted by Uswitch.com
1. Energy experts at uswitch.com sought to determine the most dangerous country in the world to live in based on the number of natural disasters that have historically occurred within their borders, along with the damages and casualties sustained.
2. For this study, time-series data of natural disasters that have occurred globally from 1902-2021 was extracted fromEM-DAT. The source provides a comprehensive account on natural disasters, their locations and impacts over a time-period.
3. The natural disasters investigated were droughts, earthquakes, epidemics, extreme temperature, floods, fog, glacial lake outbursts, extraterrestrial impacts, insect infestation, landslides, storms, volcanic activity, mass movement and wildfires. Factors that determine the impact of natural disasters in each country include the number of disasters, damage caused, people affected and total fatalities.
4. The selection of countries were filtered for those only as members of the UN. Lastly, to optimise our choice of weightings, an additional column comparing total damages to the countries’ most recent GDP was implemented as a total percentage.
5. The total score out of 10 was determined by utilising an average percent rank across all of the variables investigated in the resulting dataset. The weights were asymmetrically distributed between the variables such that total affected and total disasters had a greater influence on the score.
6. The weighted percent rank score provides a comprehensive rating and is used to determine the most dangerous country in the world to live, based on natural disasters.
7. The data was collected on 09/12/21 and is accurate as of then.
Top 10 countries experiencing the most natural disasters


