32nd Edition – February 2024
As we reflect on the natural catastrophes that befell our dear continent in recent times, there is a candid question that always comes to mind: “How else could we harness our energy and resources to efficiently mitigate such expensive risks, now that science and technology are yet to predict their occurrences with accuracy?”. Quite a legitimate question, because the dreadful sight of the aftermath of the recent natural catastrophes on the African continent left no one indifferent.
The list in 2023 was just too long and too costly. We mention here these few: the EARTHQUAKE of 8 September 2023 in Morocco (death toll: nearly 3,000 people, economic cost: nearly US$ 10.7 billion, reconstruction cost: US$11.7 billion in the next 5 years); the FLOODS in Libya (death toll: more than 5,000 Libyans died and more than 10,000 remain missing, economic loss: unknown but very high, reconstruction cost: US$ 1.8 billion); in the Democratic Republic of Congo (death toll: more than 400 lives); Rwanda (death toll: more than 131 lives) and the CYCLONE in Mozambique (cyclone Freddy’s death toll: over 1,400 lives)