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Gavin Newsom’s Resume: $1 Trillion in Disasters & Mismanagement

Gavin Newsom

California’s Era of Unrelenting Crisis

Since Gavin Newsom took office in January 2019, California has endured one of the most expensive and turbulent periods in state history. Wildfires, storms, floods, and the COVID-19 pandemic have together generated nearly $1 trillion in total damages, losses, and economic fallout.

While some of these disasters were natural, others were worsened by poor management and political decisions. Fire prevention projects went unfinished, unemployment fraud drained state funds, and storm preparedness lagged behind years of warnings. The result is a state struggling to recover — both economically and socially — after years of cascading crises.

Wildfires: California’s Most Expensive Ongoing Disaster

California’s wildfires have long been part of its natural landscape, but under Governor Newsom, they’ve reached unprecedented scale and cost. Between 2019 and 2025, wildfires have caused an estimated $300 billion in total damages, making them the largest single source of loss.

Key Events and Costs:

Despite record budgets for CAL FIRE, fire prevention goals were consistently missed. State audits found that only a fraction of the promised forest-thinning and fuel-clearing projects were ever completed. In 2019, Newsom announced a plan to treat 90,000 acres of high-risk forest annually. By 2021, only about 11,000 acres had been treated — roughly 12% of the target.

Critics say the state prioritized emergency firefighting over prevention. CAL FIRE’s budget grew to more than $3.3 billion per year, but suppression costs consistently exceeded funding for vegetation management. The imbalance has left forests overloaded with dry fuel, ensuring that future fire seasons will remain catastrophic and costly.

COVID-19: The $200 Billion Policy Disaster

While wildfires burned the hills, the pandemic scorched California’s economy. The COVID-19 crisis cost the state and its residents over $200 billion in direct and indirect losses.

The $32 Billion EDD Scandal

At the height of the pandemic, California’s Employment Development Department (EDD) was overwhelmed by millions of unemployment claims. Instead of tightening verification systems, officials loosened them — allowing over $32 billion in fraudulent claims to be paid.

Investigators later found that scammers used fake names, stolen identities, and even the names of prison inmates to collect benefits. It became the largest case of taxpayer fraud in state history, dwarfing losses from any single natural disaster.

Thousands of legitimate claimants waited months for payments, while criminals cashed in. Despite early warnings from auditors and law enforcement, the Newsom administration failed to implement modern ID verification tools until after the fraud exploded.

Small Business Collapse

California’s lockdowns were among the strictest and longest in the nation. While large corporations like Amazon and Costco stayed open, small retailers and restaurants were forced to shut down for months. By 2021, more than 40,000 small businesses had permanently closed, wiping out local economies across Los Angeles, San Francisco, and San Diego.

Economic research suggests small business closures and lost revenue accounted for $20–25 billion in losses statewide. Restaurants alone saw more than 30% fail to reopen. Critics say California’s “one-size-fits-all” restrictions punished small employers while giving special treatment to politically connected industries.

School Closures and Lost Learning

California also led the nation in keeping public schools closed. Districts like Los Angeles Unified remained remote for nearly 18 months — long after other states reopened safely. Meanwhile, Newsom’s own children attended private in-person classes.

A Stanford University study found that California students lost the equivalent of a full academic year of progress, particularly in low-income communities. Economists estimate the long-term economic impact of that learning loss could exceed $1 trillion nationwide, with California among the hardest hit.

The combination of economic shutdowns, learning losses, and administrative fraud made the pandemic one of California’s most expensive man-made disasters.

Storms and Floods: Billions Lost to Neglect

After years of drought, California swung to the opposite extreme. Between 2022 and 2024, back-to-back atmospheric river storms pummeled the state, overwhelming levees and flooding towns from the Bay Area to San Diego.

The 2023 Pajaro River levee failure in Monterey County inundated thousands of homes, displacing farmworker communities and causing more than $7 billion in losses. A state audit later revealed that the levee had been on the federal repair list for over a decade but never upgraded.

In early 2024, additional atmospheric rivers hit Southern California, causing $11 billion in damages and triggering multiple FEMA disaster declarations.

The state’s share of the costs — about $1 billion — came through emergency repair programs, debris removal, and its required 18.75% match for FEMA’s Public Assistance funds. But the real cost fell on residents: uninsured property damage, lost crops, and disrupted transportation totaled more than $20 billion.

The Financial Fallout

The cumulative impact of California’s disasters under Newsom is staggering. From 2019 through 2025:

  • Wildfires: ≈ $300 billion

  • COVID-19 pandemic: ≈ $200 billion

  • Storms and floods: ≈ $75 billion

  • Other losses (droughts, earthquakes, recovery costs): ≈ $25 billion

  • Indirect and long-term economic impacts: ≈ $375 billion

Total Estimated Damages:$975 billion to $1 trillion

Roughly $50–60 billion of that total came directly from state spending, including CAL FIRE budgets, unemployment fraud, storm-recovery costs, and small-business grants. The federal government covered about $20 billion through FEMA, SBA, and disaster aid. But most of the burden — more than $800 billion — fell on residents and the private sector in the form of destroyed property, lost income, and higher costs of living.

Missed Prevention and Oversight

The pattern is clear: California has spent far more reacting to disasters than preventing them.

  • Fire-prevention projects remain years behind schedule.

  • Levee upgrades and stormwater systems have lagged decades behind federal warnings.

  • Unemployment systems remain outdated despite record fraud losses.

State budgets have ballooned, but accountability has not. Even as California spends billions on emergency management, the core systems that could prevent or contain disasters remain neglected.

Gavin Newsom’s Presidential Ambitions Face a Harsh Reality

Governor Gavin Newsom has hinted at national aspirations, positioning himself as a polished, progressive leader ready for the presidency. But his record in California tells a very different story — one defined by massive spending, record losses, and repeated failures to deliver on promises of competence and reform.

Since taking office in 2019, Newsom’s administration has overseen nearly $1 trillion in cumulative disaster and economic losses — the costliest period in California history. Wildfires have grown larger and deadlier, the COVID-19 response drained billions in fraud, and the state’s once-stable budget is now back in deep deficit.

A State on Fire and in Debt

Under Newsom’s leadership, wildfire prevention fell far behind promises. In 2019, he pledged to treat 90,000 acres of high-risk forest each year to reduce fuel buildup. Three years later, audits showed less than 12% of that goal was met.

Meanwhile, firefighting budgets soared. CAL FIRE spending climbed to over $3.3 billion per year, but those funds went mostly to emergency suppression — not prevention. The result: megafires like the Dixie Fire in 2021 and the Los Angeles firestorm of 2025, which together caused hundreds of billions in damages and destroyed entire towns.

Newsom’s environmental and regulatory red tape has made it harder, not easier, to thin forests or maintain defensible space. Federal and local agencies have frequently accused Sacramento of blocking or delaying essential fuel-reduction projects.

COVID-19: A Billion-Dollar Blunder

The pandemic revealed even deeper weaknesses in Newsom’s leadership. His administration presided over the largest unemployment-fraud scandal in U.S. history, losing more than $32 billion in taxpayer money to criminals and fake applicants.

At the same time, California’s lockdown policies were among the strictest and longest in the country, devastating small businesses. More than 40,000 permanently closed, while corporate giants grew stronger. Schools stayed closed for over a year in many districts, leaving students behind academically — even as Newsom’s own children attended private classes in person.

Despite all that pain, California’s COVID-19 mortality rate ended up nearly identical to the national average, calling into question whether the extreme restrictions accomplished much at all.

The COVID Surplus That Vanished

In 2021, Newsom boasted of a $97 billion budget surplus, calling it proof of California’s fiscal strength. Just three years later, the state faces a $45 billion deficit — a swing of more than $140 billion.

Analysts at the Legislative Analyst’s Office say the surplus was exaggerated, based on temporary revenue spikes from Silicon Valley’s boom years. Instead of saving for future downturns, Newsom launched short-term spending programs and mailed out $9 billion in “inflation relief” checks right before his re-election campaign.

When the economy cooled, the money was gone — and California was back in the red. 

The Disconnect Between Image and Reality

Newsom’s image as a slick communicator and telegenic executive contrasts sharply with the results on the ground. Behind the photo ops and talking points, Californians are paying the price:

To many, his rumored presidential ambitions sound detached from reality — a political climb built on a crumbling foundation.

A Symbol of Overreach

Perhaps nothing captured California’s COVID-era contradictions better than the arrest of a lone surfer in Malibu in April 2020. The man was handcuffed by sheriff’s deputies for paddling out into the ocean — entirely alone — during the state’s stay-at-home order.

The image of an empty beach, a solitary surfer, and police officers enforcing an arbitrary rule became a national symbol of overreach. It reflected how the state’s lockdowns often punished ordinary citizens while insiders and politicians bent their own rules.

Meanwhile, just months later, Newsom himself was photographed dining maskless at the French Laundry, one of the most exclusive restaurants in the world — underscoring the double standard that defined his pandemic leadership.

surfer arrested in California

The Bottom Line

Gavin Newsom may talk like a future president, but his record reads like a warning label. Over six years, California has suffered massive fires, economic upheaval, government waste, and a steady exodus of residents.

If leadership is judged by results, Newsom’s tenure offers plenty of lessons — most of them costly.

He’s campaigning on the idea that he can do for America what he’s done for California. That should give voters pause.

Related articles:

How Biofuel Hype Burned CalPERS (California Public Employees' Retirement System): $468 Million Clean-Energy Loss


The Rise of America’s Disaster Economy

Introduction: Disasters as a New Economic Engine

For decades, natural disasters were seen as exceptional events that disrupted the U.S. economy. In 2025, they’ve become part of its foundation. From hurricanes and wildfires to floods and power grid failures, America’s “disaster industrial complex” is now a major economic force — a trillion-dollar ecosystem built on rebuilding what’s been lost. Investors, insurers, contractors, and data analytics firms are capitalizing on a new reality: disaster response is a permanent business. At DisasterReliefMaps.com, our mission is to make this system more transparent. By mapping wildfires, flood zones, shelters, and aid resources in real time, we expose the growing footprint of disaster recovery spending — and help citizens see where the money flows when catastrophe strikes.

The Numbers Behind the Crisis

Trillion Dollar Disaster Economy

The cost of U.S. disasters has surged beyond historic levels. According to Bloomberg’s 2025 analysis, insured losses reached roughly **$105 billion** in the first nine months of the year alone — putting America on track for yet another $100-billion-plus year. When factoring in uninsured losses, FEMA funding, private reconstruction, and infrastructure repair, the total annual cost exceeds **$1 trillion**, or about **3% of GDP**. This means disasters are now comparable in economic weight to entire industries such as construction or energy. Every hurricane, tornado, or wildfire triggers billions in contracts for cleanup, logistics, and rebuilding. What once drained the economy now drives it — albeit through destruction and loss.

Inside the Disaster Industrial Complex

The “complex” is not a single sector but a constellation of interconnected industries that profit when catastrophe hits. These include: Insurance and reinsurance companies that underwrite billions in high-risk policies. Construction and restoration firms specializing in rebuilding homes, roads, and utilities. Disaster logistics and debris-removal contractors that mobilize after FEMA declarations. Risk analytics and catastrophe modeling companies that sell predictive data to insurers and governments. Microgrid and generator manufacturers that supply backup energy to hospitals and cities. Temporary housing and modular building companies serving displaced populations. Many of these firms now attend the same investor conferences as renewable-energy startups or infrastructure funds. They pitch “resilience as growth.” Wall Street sees steady demand because climate volatility ensures a continuous pipeline of recovery work.

Insurance Under Pressure

Insurance used to be the economy’s shock absorber. But after years of escalating claims, major carriers are retreating from high-risk markets. Homeowners in California, Florida, and coastal Louisiana are watching premiums double or triple — if coverage is available at all. Some insurers have halted new policies entirely, citing unsustainable losses from repeated wildfires and hurricanes. As private insurance withdraws, government backstops like FEMA’s National Flood Insurance Program and state emergency funds are stretched to their limits. This leaves homeowners and small businesses shouldering more of the risk, often forced to self-insure or rebuild without adequate aid. The result is a widening gap between those who can afford recovery and those who cannot — a defining fault line of the new disaster economy.

When Disaster Becomes Business as Usual

In past decades, a hurricane or earthquake would trigger a temporary surge in GDP from rebuilding. Now, the cycle is nearly continuous. A wildfire in California overlaps with flooding in Texas and tornadoes across the Midwest. Each event mobilizes its own network of contractors, data analysts, and aid vendors. This perpetual motion of destruction and reconstruction has created what some economists call “permanent recovery mode.” Government contracts are awarded before the smoke clears. Private equity firms buy up restoration companies. Satellite-imaging startups map damage for insurers. The economy adapts — but communities rarely return to normal. DisasterReliefMaps highlights this cycle visually: users can view clusters of federally declared disasters since 2015 and see how hotspots of repeated loss have emerged — from Gulf Coast hurricanes to western megafires. The data show that billions in rebuilding have been spent in the same counties multiple times within a decade.

Winners and Losers of the New Economy

Winners: Investors in catastrophe-bond funds, generator manufacturers, and data-modeling firms. Construction giants with federal emergency contracts. Tech startups using AI and satellite data to predict losses or optimize response logistics. Reinsurance firms that price global climate risk. Losers: Middle-class homeowners facing unaffordable premiums or policy cancellations. Local governments burdened with rebuilding infrastructure faster than budgets allow. Small contractors underbid by national chains in FEMA projects. Communities that never fully recover before the next disaster hits. This divide underscores a troubling paradox: disasters now produce economic growth but deepen inequality. The GDP gains come at the expense of resilience and long-term security.

Mapping the Economics of Recovery

DisasterReliefMaps aggregates crowd-sourced and government data to visualize how disaster spending reshapes America’s landscape. Here are a few patterns our analysis reveals: Repeated rebuilding: Counties in California, Louisiana, and Texas show multiple federal disaster declarations within five years, suggesting “re-recovery” economies where rebuilding has become an industry. Unequal access to aid: Low-income areas receive slower disbursement of FEMA grants and smaller insurance payouts, prolonging recovery timelines. Infrastructure lag: While private homes may be rebuilt quickly, public utilities, bridges, and hospitals often lag years behind — leaving communities vulnerable to the next event. These insights demonstrate that mapping disasters is not just about tracking damage — it’s about revealing where systemic inefficiencies and inequities persist.

The Role of AI, Drones, and Data Analytics

A major feature of the modern disaster economy is the integration of **technology and predictive modeling**. AI tools now estimate damage within hours using satellite imagery. Drones map inaccessible flood zones, while machine-learning models simulate how fire, wind, and water spread under different climate conditions. Companies like Moody’s RMS and Swiss Re have become household names in catastrophe modeling. Their products inform how insurers price risk — and how governments allocate recovery funds. Yet the opacity of these algorithms also raises questions: who decides the value of a home destroyed by fire? And what happens when algorithmic underestimation denies coverage? DisasterReliefMaps contributes transparency by displaying verified ground reports alongside model data, helping bridge the gap between satellite analytics and human experience.

From Reaction to Resilience

Despite the money flowing through the disaster industrial complex, most of it still funds **reaction**, not **prevention**. Less than 10% of federal disaster spending is directed toward long-term mitigation like sea-wallsfloodplain restoration, or wildfire-resistant building codes. The rest is consumed by cleanup, insurance payouts, and emergency contracts. Experts argue that the real growth opportunity lies in resilience infrastructure — systems that prevent loss instead of monetizing recovery. Microgridsdistributed water systems, and fire-resistant housing materials can reduce future spending while protecting lives. If policymakers and investors shift focus from reaction to preparation, the U.S. could transform its trillion-dollar disaster burden into a sustainable resilience economy.

Community-Driven Solutions

Grassroots organizations and data platforms are filling gaps left by slow government response. Citizen mapping during wildfires, crowdsourced reports of blocked roads, and volunteer rescue networks are now essential parts of recovery logistics. These decentralized efforts not only save lives but also generate valuable public data — data that corporations often monetize later. DisasterReliefMaps.com integrates community submissions to show shelters, donation centers, and aid distribution points in real time. By democratizing data, we aim to reduce the asymmetry between large recovery contractors and local residents. Transparency is the first step toward accountability.

The Future of Disaster Capitalism

The term “disaster capitalism” isn’t new — it describes how crises often lead to privatization and profit. But the 2025 version is different: it’s systemic, data-driven, and normalized. Government budgets quietly depend on the GDP lift from recovery spending. Investors treat catastrophe bonds as safe, climate-hedged assets. Meanwhile, public trust in federal agencies erodes when recovery feels transactional. If the U.S. continues on this trajectory, disasters could become an implicit pillar of economic stability — a morally troubling but financially self-reinforcing cycle. To break it, resilience must be treated as infrastructure, not charity. Maps, transparency, and citizen oversight can help ensure that recovery funds rebuild smarter, not just faster.

Conclusion: Mapping Accountability

Every burned forest, flooded town, or wind-torn coast feeds an expanding network of businesses and bureaucracies. The “disaster industrial complex” may keep the economy humming, but it also highlights how unprepared America remains for a warmer, more volatile planet. At DisasterReliefMaps.com, our goal is to visualize this transformation — to turn data into public insight. By mapping where recovery dollars flow, where rebuilding stalls, and where insurance gaps persist, we give communities a voice inside an economy that too often profits from their loss. The next phase of U.S. growth shouldn’t come from disaster recovery. It should come from resilience, foresight, and transparency — values that can be built, not rebuilt.

Why We Call It El Niño and La Niña, Not Warmer Oceans

Every few years, the Pacific Ocean flips between two dramatic moods — one that warms the world, and one that cools it. Scientists call these phases El Niño and La Niña. But many people wonder: why use Spanish names instead of simply saying “warmer ocean” or “colder ocean”? The answer lies in a blend of history, science, and communication. These names describe far more than temperature; they reflect a powerful global rhythm that connects ocean and atmosphere.

1. Where the Names Came From

RSOE EDIS: Hungary’s Global Emergency & Disaster Monitoring Service

disaster map

The Hungarian RSOE and Its Emergency and Disaster Information Service (EDIS)

Introduction

When disasters strike, the difference between chaos and effective response often depends on the speed and accuracy of information. The Hungarian National Association of Radio Distress-Signalling and Infocommunications (RSOE) has stepped into this global challenge with its Emergency and Disaster Information Service (EDIS). For decades, this service has monitored, documented, and analyzed emergencies around the world, providing reliable, real-time updates to governments, organizations, and the public.

EDIS has become a crucial resource, offering one of the most comprehensive disaster monitoring platforms available today. By integrating data from trusted media, governmental authorities, and international organizations, the system ensures that communities worldwide can stay informed when it matters most.

Origins of RSOE and EDIS

RSOE was established in Hungary to strengthen the nation’s emergency communications and international coordination. Its focus has always been on radio distress-signalling, infocommunications, and emergency response technologies. Over time, its mission expanded to include building global awareness of disasters through the EDIS platform.

Launched in the early 2000s, EDIS was designed to leverage the speed of the internet to track natural and man-made disasters in real time. Unlike traditional reporting, which might take hours or even days, EDIS could deliver updates within minutes, offering a decisive advantage to emergency responders and the public.

Objectives of EDIS

The service was built with three clear objectives:

  1. Monitoring Events Worldwide
    EDIS continuously tracks earthquakes, floods, wildfires, severe weather, transportation accidents, hazardous material spills, and even epidemics.

  2. Documenting Incidents
    Every event is logged in a structured way, allowing users to filter by type, severity, or location. This has created a unique historical database of global disasters.

  3. Analyzing Impact
    Beyond reporting, EDIS analyzes events by considering population density, geography, and available resources, offering insights into the potential consequences of each disaster.

How EDIS Collects Data

Accuracy and reliability are at the heart of EDIS. The platform gathers data from:

By merging these sources, EDIS creates a layered system of verification. Each event is cross-checked before being made public, striking a balance between speed and accuracy.

User Interfaces and Accessibility

One of the strengths of EDIS lies in its user-friendly presentation of complex data.

  • Interactive Maps: Events are pinned to global maps with color-coded icons, helping users instantly recognize the type and severity of the disaster.

  • Event Lists and Summaries: Users can browse current events in chronological order, complete with details such as magnitude, location, and reported damage.

  • Mobile Accessibility: The platform adapts to smartphones and tablets, ensuring that decision-makers and the public can stay informed on the go.

This accessibility has made EDIS not only a tool for emergency managers but also a trusted reference for journalists, researchers, and everyday citizens.

Notification Services

EDIS also offers targeted notifications. Customers can subscribe to receive alerts about selected event types or regions. For example:

This tailored service ensures that organizations can focus on the information most relevant to their operations and safety concerns.

Types of Emergencies Covered

The scope of EDIS is vast, encompassing nearly every conceivable type of crisis:

  • Natural Disasters: earthquakes, hurricanes, tsunamis, volcanic eruptions, floods, droughts, and wildfires.

  • Technological and Industrial Accidents: chemical spills, nuclear incidents, transportation accidents, and infrastructure failures.

  • Biological Threats: pandemics, epidemics, and localized disease outbreaks.

  • Security Events: major accidents, acts of terrorism, or large-scale public safety incidents.

By cataloging such a wide range of events, EDIS becomes a single point of reference for global hazard awareness.

Global Importance of EDIS

Though based in Hungary, EDIS has gained international recognition as a neutral, reliable platform. Its importance can be summarized in three areas:

  1. For Governments
    Officials can use EDIS to cross-check their own data and monitor risks beyond their borders.

  2. For Aid Organizations
    Relief agencies rely on timely updates to mobilize staff, supplies, and funding where needed most.

  3. For the Public
    Citizens gain access to the same verified information that professionals use, helping them make informed decisions during emergencies.

Case Studies of EDIS in Action

Earthquake Monitoring

When major earthquakes hit Asia or South America, EDIS has often been among the first platforms to publish details, including magnitude, location, and aftershock risks.

Pandemic Tracking

During global health crises, EDIS tracked outbreaks by gathering official health authority updates, offering the public a clear picture of where cases were spreading.

European Floods

In the event of massive European floods, EDIS’s maps showed the expansion of impacted regions in real time, supporting both media coverage and aid coordination.

Challenges Faced by EDIS

While the system is powerful, it also faces challenges:

  • Information Overload: With countless data sources, filtering relevant updates requires constant technological improvement.

  • Verification Speed: Balancing speed with accuracy means that some events may initially be underreported until verified.

  • Global Coverage: In certain regions, local data may be scarce or censored, limiting the system’s ability to provide full details.

The Future of EDIS

Looking forward, EDIS is exploring integration with AI, satellite data, and crowdsourced platforms. These innovations could enable:

  • Automated detection of wildfires or floods from satellite imagery.

  • AI-based analysis of social media for faster situational awareness.

  • Real-time integration with emergency management apps worldwide.

As disasters grow more complex due to climate change, urbanization, and globalization, the role of such platforms will only expand.

Conclusion

The Hungarian RSOE’s Emergency and Disaster Information Service (EDIS) is more than just a monitoring platform; it is a global safeguard of awareness. By combining speed, accuracy, and accessibility, EDIS helps bridge the gap between emerging crises and effective responses. Governments, aid agencies, journalists, and citizens all benefit from the service’s commitment to transparency and reliability.

In a world where every second counts, EDIS proves that informed communities are safer communities.

Typhoon Ragasa: Tracking, Impact & Preparedness Guide

Typhoon Ragasa

Typhoon Ragasa has emerged as one of the most powerful storms of the year, drawing the attention of millions across Southeast Asia. The typhoon’s projected path shows it sweeping across the Luzon Strait, Hong Kong, and southern China before pushing inland toward northern Vietnam and Laos. With sustained winds of over 150 km/h and the potential for widespread flooding, Ragasa highlights the vulnerability of coastal and inland regions to destructive tropical cyclones.

What Is Typhoon Ragasa? 

How AI Is Being Used for Disaster Forecasting

From Physics to AI

For decades, disaster forecasting relied mainly on physics-based numerical models. These systems use supercomputers to solve complex equations simulating atmospheric and geological processes. While powerful, they take hours to run, limiting how quickly forecasts can be updated.

Artificial Intelligence (AI) is now reshaping this process. By analyzing decades of historical data and real-time sensor inputs, AI models can generate forecasts in seconds. They not only provide faster results but also detect patterns and anomalies that traditional models often miss. Instead of replacing physics models outright, AI augments them—giving decision-makers the best of both worlds: speed and accuracy.

Weather Extremes: Hurricanes and Severe Storms 

Weather Tomorrow: The Most Accurate Forecast Services Ranked

Planning for tomorrow’s weather is more than convenience — it impacts agriculture, shipping, aviation, and even local events. But not all weather apps and services are equal. Independent evaluations show wide gaps in accuracy, especially for short-term forecasts. So which weather provider is most accurate for tomorrow’s forecast? Let’s explore the rankings and why they stand out.

Why Forecast Accuracy Matters

The World’s Worst Earthquakes Of 2020

The Worst Earthquakes of 2020

Earthquakes are sudden reminders of the Earth’s restless nature. In 2020, while the world’s attention was focused on the global pandemic, several destructive earthquakes struck across different continents. From Turkey and Greece to Mexico and Croatia, these quakes caused devastating human losses, economic damage, and left lasting scars on communities. Looking back helps us understand how these events unfolded and what can be learned to reduce future risks.

Understanding What Made Them the “Worst”

Not all earthquakes of high magnitude become disasters. Some occur in remote or unpopulated regions, causing little damage. Others strike near major cities or shallow beneath the Earth’s surface, producing catastrophic consequences. When considering the most significant earthquakes of 2020, several factors stand out:

  • Magnitude and depth: Larger and shallower earthquakes shake the ground more violently.

  • Human cost: Deaths, injuries, and displacement measure the direct toll.

  • Infrastructure and economic damage: Collapsed buildings, destroyed roads, and interrupted services.

  • Secondary effects: Tsunamis, landslides, fires, and prolonged aftershocks.

By looking at these criteria, a handful of 2020’s earthquakes emerge as the most destructive.

The Aegean Sea Earthquake (Turkey & Greece, October 30)

On October 30, 2020, a powerful 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck the Aegean Sea near the Greek island of Samos. Its shallow depth magnified the impact. In Turkey, the coastal city of İzmir was hardest hit. Apartment blocks collapsed, streets were filled with rubble, and more than 1,000 people were injured.

The human toll was devastating: 117 people were killed in Turkey, while Greece also reported fatalities. A small tsunami followed, flooding parts of Samos and coastal Turkey. Thousands were left homeless as winter approached, adding another layer of hardship. This earthquake was the deadliest of 2020.

The Elazığ Earthquake (Turkey, January 24)

Earlier in the year, on January 24, a 6.7 magnitude earthquake struck near Elazığ in eastern Turkey along the East Anatolian Fault. Dozens of multi-story buildings collapsed, burying people beneath the rubble. The death toll reached 41, and more than 1,600 were injured.

Entire villages suffered damage, with homes destroyed and livelihoods disrupted. Rescue operations were hampered by winter conditions. Although smaller in magnitude than some other quakes in 2020, Elazığ’s shallow depth and proximity to population centers made it one of the year’s most destructive events.

The Oaxaca Earthquake (Mexico, June 23)

On June 23, a 7.4 magnitude earthquake rattled Mexico’s southern coast near Oaxaca. Tremors were felt across much of the country, including Mexico City, nearly 400 miles away. The shaking damaged homes, schools, health centers, and highways.

At least 10 people were killed and 23 injured. The quake triggered landslides in mountainous areas and damaged hundreds of buildings. A tsunami warning was issued, and small waves reached the coastline. Though the casualty numbers were lower compared to Turkey’s earthquakes, the wide area affected and the economic costs were significant.

The Petrinja Earthquake (Croatia, December 29)

Near the end of 2020, Croatia experienced its strongest earthquake in decades. On December 29, a 6.4 magnitude quake struck near the town of Petrinja. Its shallow depth meant the ground shaking was severe.

Entire streets in Petrinja were reduced to rubble, and many historical buildings collapsed. The quake killed several people, injured dozens, and left thousands homeless. Damage was estimated in the billions of euros. Coming during the winter, and in the midst of the pandemic, the earthquake made recovery even more difficult.

The Simeonof Earthquake (Alaska, July 22)

Alaska was home to the largest earthquake of 2020: a magnitude 7.8 event near Simeonof Island in the Aleutians. Fortunately, its remote location meant minimal direct human impact. A tsunami warning was issued but later lifted.

Although the quake did not cause mass casualties, its sheer size serves as a reminder that seismic risks in remote regions can still threaten coastal communities if tsunami waves are generated.

The Zagreb Earthquake (Croatia, March 22)

Earlier in the year, Croatia also experienced a damaging 5.3 magnitude earthquake near Zagreb, its capital. Despite its moderate magnitude, its shallow depth and proximity to the city caused widespread structural damage.

Dozens of buildings were severely damaged, including hospitals and historical landmarks. The earthquake struck while the country was dealing with COVID-19 lockdowns, complicating evacuation and emergency response efforts. One person was killed, and many more were injured.

Other Notable Earthquakes of 2020

  • Xinjiang, China (January): A magnitude 6.0–6.4 quake damaged hundreds of homes and killed at least one person.

  • Puerto Rico (January): A series of earthquakes, including a 6.4 event, damaged homes and left thousands without power.

  • Indonesia and the Philippines also experienced several strong quakes, though with limited casualties compared to the larger disasters elsewhere.

Comparison Table of the Worst Earthquakes of 2020

Location & Date Magnitude Death Toll Estimated Damage
Aegean Sea (Turkey & Greece), Oct 30 7.0 117+ Billions (Turkey)
Elazığ, Turkey, Jan 24 6.7 41 Hundreds of millions
Oaxaca, Mexico, Jun 23 7.4 10 Billions
Petrinja, Croatia, Dec 29 6.4 7+ €5–5.5 billion
Simeonof, Alaska, Jul 22 7.8 0 Limited economic loss
Zagreb, Croatia, Mar 22 5.3 1 Hundreds of millions
Xinjiang, China, Jan 2020 6.0–6.4 1 Local housing damage

The Global Picture in 2020

In total, seismologists recorded over 13,000 earthquakes worldwide with a magnitude of 4.0 or higher. Most caused little harm because they occurred far from population centers or deep underground. Yet as the earthquakes in Turkey, Mexico, and Croatia showed, when conditions align, even moderate quakes can become disasters.

The geographic distribution also highlighted familiar patterns:

  • The Pacific “Ring of Fire” remained the most active seismic region.

  • Turkey’s fault lines once again produced deadly outcomes.

  • Europe, though less seismically active, saw surprising destruction in Croatia.

Why Some Earthquakes Were More Devastating

Several key factors explain why certain earthquakes in 2020 caused such extensive damage:

  1. Depth: Shallow quakes transmit more energy to the surface, amplifying shaking.

  2. Proximity to cities: Earthquakes near densely populated areas lead to higher casualties.

  3. Building standards: Poorly constructed or older buildings collapse more easily.

  4. Secondary effects: Tsunamis, aftershocks, and landslides compound the damage.

  5. Timing: Disasters can be worse if they strike during cold weather, at night, or during global crises such as the pandemic.

Lessons Learned from 2020

The earthquakes of 2020 provide urgent reminders of the need for preparedness:

  • Stronger building codes: Modern construction standards save lives, but retrofitting older structures is equally important.

  • Early warning systems: Even seconds of advance notice can prevent deaths.

  • Public education: Teaching communities how to respond—drop, cover, and hold on—makes a difference.

  • Urban planning: Avoiding construction on known fault lines reduces risks.

  • International cooperation: Disaster relief efforts and shared expertise speed up recovery.

Conclusion

The year 2020 was marked not only by a pandemic but also by earthquakes that devastated communities across the globe. The Aegean Sea quake in Turkey and Greece, the Elazığ and Oaxaca disasters, and the Petrinja earthquake in Croatia all demonstrated how quickly lives can be upended.

These events highlight the importance of vigilance, preparedness, and resilience. While earthquakes cannot be prevented, their worst impacts can be mitigated through planning, education, and investment in safety. Remembering 2020’s tragedies is not just an exercise in looking back—it is a guide for protecting lives in the future.

Top 10 Worst Disasters in U.S. History

Throughout its history, the United States has faced catastrophic events that reshaped its society, economy, and institutions. From deadly pandemics to natural disasters and acts of terrorism, each event left behind valuable lessons that continue to influence disaster preparedness and public safety today. Below is an in-depth look at the 10 worst disasters in U.S. history, ranked by human cost, social disruption, and long-term consequences.

1. September 11, 2001 (9/11) Terrorist Attacks

On September 11, 2001, terrorists hijacked four planes. Two hit the Twin Towers in New York City, one struck the Pentagon, and the last crashed in Pennsylvania after passengers intervened. Nearly 3,000 lives were lost. The attacks changed U.S. domestic and foreign policy forever, ushering in heightened airport security, the USA PATRIOT Act, and the War on Terror. It also transformed intelligence coordination and counterterrorism strategies.

2. Spanish Flu Pandemic (1918–1919)

The influenza pandemic of 1918–1919 remains the deadliest health disaster in American history, killing an estimated 675,000 Americans. Hospitals were overwhelmed, cities imposed quarantines, and public life came to a standstill. The outbreak highlighted the need for better public health infrastructure and helped shape the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in later decades. The pandemic remains a key case study for handling outbreaks, influencing modern responses to COVID-19.

3. Hurricane Katrina (2005)

Hurricane Katrina struck the Gulf Coast in August 2005, devastating Louisiana and Mississippi. More than 1,800 people died, and New Orleans suffered catastrophic flooding after levees failed. Tens of thousands were displaced, and damages exceeded $125 billion. Failures at every level of government led to reforms in FEMA and disaster response planning. According to FEMA, the storm reshaped federal approaches to disaster relief, preparedness, and urban resilience.

4. Galveston Hurricane of 1900

The deadliest natural disaster in U.S. history hit Galveston, Texas, on September 8, 1900. With little warning, a massive storm surge engulfed the city, killing between 8,000 and 12,000 people. At the time, storm prediction and communication were primitive, and residents had no way to evacuate. In the aftermath, Galveston built a seawall and raised parts of the city, setting a precedent for coastal engineering projects nationwide.

5. Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill (2010)

The Deepwater Horizon drilling rig exploded in April 2010, causing one of the largest marine oil spills ever. Eleven workers died, but the greater toll came from the millions of barrels of oil that spilled into the Gulf of Mexico. Fishing communities and tourism industries were devastated, and ecosystems are still recovering. The disaster triggered stronger federal oversight of offshore drilling and exposed the risks of deepwater exploration.

6. The Dust Bowl (1930s)

During the 1930s, the Great Plains endured a combination of severe drought and poor farming practices that created massive dust storms. Entire farms were lost, and hundreds of thousands of people fled to other regions in search of work and survival. The Dust Bowl underscored the importance of sustainable agriculture. In response, the government created the Soil Conservation Service and promoted new farming techniques to prevent a recurrence.

7. Pearl Harbor Attack (1941)

On December 7, 1941, Japan launched a surprise attack on Pearl Harbor, killing more than 2,400 Americans and destroying much of the Pacific Fleet. The event shocked the nation and led directly to U.S. involvement in World War II. It also exposed flaws in intelligence sharing and military readiness. In the years since, Pearl Harbor has remained a defining moment for U.S. defense strategy and global engagement.

8. Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire (1911)

In March 1911, a fire broke out at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York City. Locked exits and poor safety standards trapped workers, leading to the deaths of 146 people, most of them young immigrant women. The tragedy galvanized the labor movement and led to sweeping reforms in workplace safety laws, fire codes, and labor protections. Today, it serves as a symbol of the fight for safe working conditions.

9. Oklahoma City Bombing (1995)

On April 19, 1995, a truck bomb exploded outside the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 people, including children in a daycare center. Hundreds more were injured. The attack remains the deadliest act of domestic terrorism in U.S. history. It led to new federal anti-terrorism laws, enhanced building security, and a greater focus on homegrown extremism.

10. Jonestown Mass Suicide (1978)

In November 1978, more than 900 members of the Peoples Temple cult, led by Jim Jones, died in a mass suicide in Guyana. Most were U.S. citizens, lured into the commune with promises of equality and community. The tragedy shocked the world and prompted studies into cult psychology, mass persuasion, and the vulnerabilities of marginalized groups. It remains one of the darkest social disasters tied to American history.

Table: Top 10 Worst Disasters in U.S. History

# Disaster Year Death Toll / Loss Primary Cause Lasting Impact
1 9/11 Terrorist Attacks 2001 ~3,000 Terrorist hijackings National security overhaul, War on Terror
2 Spanish Flu 1918–1919 ~675,000 Influenza pandemic Public health reforms, CDC foundation
3 Hurricane Katrina 2005 ~1,800 Hurricane + levee failures FEMA reforms, disaster planning
4 Galveston Hurricane 1900 ~8,000–12,000 Storm surge flooding Seawalls, coastal engineering
5 Deepwater Horizon 2010 11 deaths + massive ecological loss Oil rig explosion Environmental regulation, drilling oversight
6 Dust Bowl 1930s Hundreds of thousands displaced Drought + poor farming Soil conservation, farming reforms
7 Pearl Harbor Attack 1941 ~2,400 Surprise military attack U.S. entry into WWII, defense overhaul
8 Triangle Shirtwaist Fire 1911 146 Industrial fire Labor laws, workplace safety
9 Oklahoma City Bombing 1995 168 Domestic terrorism Counterterrorism policy, building security
10 Jonestown Mass Suicide 1978 ~909 Cult coercion Studies on cults, mental health focus

Lessons Learned from America’s Worst Disasters

Across these tragedies, common threads emerge. A lack of preparedness, weak infrastructure, and inadequate regulation worsened many outcomes, as seen in Katrina, the Galveston hurricane, and the Triangle Shirtwaist fire. Environmental vulnerability also played a role, from the Dust Bowl to the Deepwater Horizon spill. Terrorism, whether foreign or domestic, highlighted national security weaknesses in both 9/11 and Oklahoma City. Finally, social tragedies like Jonestown revealed the dangers of unchecked coercion and the need for greater mental health awareness.

Disasters of this magnitude force the nation to reflect, reform, and adapt. They result in stronger laws, better technology, improved disaster response, and a more resilient society. As the Smithsonian Institution notes, studying these events ensures that the sacrifices of victims lead to better preparedness and awareness in the future.

How to Plan for Disasters: A Complete Preparedness Guide

Disasters rarely announce themselves in advance. From hurricanes and wildfires to earthquakes, floods, and even man-made events, millions of people each year are caught off guard. The consequences can be devastating—loss of life, property destruction, financial setbacks, and long recovery periods.

Planning for disasters isn’t about expecting the worst. It’s about building resilience, creating peace of mind, and giving yourself and your family the tools to respond effectively when emergencies strike. By taking the time to prepare now, you can protect lives, minimize damage, and speed up recovery.

Step 1: Assess Local Risks

Tsunami Warning - 8.7 Earthquake Near Russia

July 30, 2025 — A major 8.7 magnitude earthquake has struck off the eastern coast of Russia near the Kuril Islands, prompting tsunami warnings across the Pacific. The quake occurred at a depth of approximately 35 km (21 miles), a level known to displace the seafloor significantly — a critical factor in generating tsunami waves.

📏 How Big Is a Magnitude 8.7 Earthquake?

An 8.7 magnitude earthquake is categorized as a “great” earthquake and ranks among the most powerful ever recorded. It releases energy equivalent to around 1,000 megatons of TNT — more than 30,000 times the energy of the Hiroshima atomic bomb.

Comparisons with other historic earthquakes:

  • 2004 Indian Ocean Earthquake: 9.1–9.3 — triggered a devastating tsunami that killed 230,000+ people
  • 2011 Japan (Tohoku): 9.0 — caused over 15,000 deaths and the Fukushima nuclear disaster
  • 2005 Indonesia (Nias): 8.7 — produced a tsunami and killed hundreds
  • 2025 Russia (Kurils): 8.7 — tsunami threat unfolding

🌐 Tsunami Wave Arrival Forecasts

Authorities have issued warnings, watches, and advisories for coastal areas across the Pacific. Below are the estimated tsunami wave arrival times:

Region Alert Level Estimated Arrival Time
Japan (Hokkaido–Kyushu) Warning / Advisory ~10:00 – 11:30 a.m. JST (July 30)
Hawaii Full Warning ~7:17 p.m. HST (July 29)
Alaska (Aleutians) Advisory Shemya: 4:46 p.m. AKDT
Adak: 5:46 p.m. AKDT
St. Paul: 7:06 p.m. AKDT
California (West Coast USA) Watch San Francisco: ~12:40 a.m. PDT
Los Angeles: ~1:05 a.m. PDT
Newport Beach: ~1:10 a.m. PDT
San Diego: ~1:15 a.m. PDT

📢 Government Actions and Evacuations

  • Japan: Coastal regions from Hokkaido to Wakayama urged to evacuate. Waves up to 1 meter (3 ft) expected.
  • Hawaii: Full evacuation orders issued for low-lying coastal areas statewide.
  • Alaska: Residents in the Aleutians and Bering Sea coast told to avoid harbors and beaches.
  • California & West Coast: Tsunami watch in effect; residents urged to stay alert for upgrades.

🔎 Live Updates & Official Sources

Monitor these official channels for real-time updates:

✅ Safety Tips

  • If you feel strong ground shaking and are near the coast, evacuate immediately — do not wait for an official alert.
  • Move at least 1 mile inland or 100 feet above sea level.
  • Stay off bridges and coastal roads — strong currents can destroy infrastructure.
  • Remain alert — the first wave may not be the largest, and waves may continue for hours.

This article will be updated as more information becomes available. Stay safe and follow all local emergency instructions.

Live Derecho Threat Coverage With Storm Chasers

Derechos are fast-moving, widespread wind storms that can produce hurricane-force gusts and cause significant destruction across large areas. Unlike tornadoes, derechos span hundreds of miles, often impacting multiple states in a matter of hours. That’s why DisasterReliefMaps.com is offering live derecho tracking coverage with real-time storm chaser video and map data to help communities stay informed and safe.

📡 Real-Time Derecho Map & Storm Chasers

Our live derecho coverage map includes:

  • 📍 Live location updates from experienced storm chasers
  • 🌪️ Radar overlays showing high wind bands and gust fronts
  • 🛰️ NOAA alerts and National Weather Service warnings
  • 🚧 Power outage areas and infrastructure impacts

Use the map to monitor storm movement, assess personal risk, and locate emergency shelters nearby. Our goal is to help you navigate away from danger zones in real time.

🎥 Watch Live: Storm Chasers in Action

Catch live streams from professional storm chasers tracking derecho events on the ground. They offer expert commentary, close-up visuals of storm fronts, and firsthand updates from impacted zones.

These videos are embedded directly from YouTube, and we rotate active chaser streams depending on the region being affected.

⚠️ What Makes Derechos So Dangerous?

A derecho is defined by a swath of severe winds that extend over 250 miles, often exceeding 70 to 100 mph. These storms can knock down trees, power lines, and even destroy buildings in minutes. They're often mistaken for tornado damage due to their intensity, but the damage path is usually more linear and widespread.

Common Derecho Impacts:

  • Power outages lasting days
  • Mass transit disruptions
  • Communication blackouts
  • Blocked roadways and emergency access

🧭 How to Use Our Map for Safety

On DisasterReliefMaps.com, you can:

  • Search for active derechos by ZIP code or city
  • View real-time damage reports and community alerts
  • Submit photos, reports, or shelter locations

Our platform is designed for mobile users in the field, offering fast-loading maps and simplified emergency tools when you need them most.

📲 Stay Alert, Stay Informed

Bookmark this page for ongoing derecho coverage and consider subscribing for live push notifications during high-risk weather events. Share the map with friends and family to help everyone stay safe.

👉 Subscribe to Derecho Alerts


DisasterReliefMaps.com is part of the Syndicated Maps network, helping communities track storms, wildfires, floods, and emergency shelters in real time. Powered by crowdsourced data and public agency feeds.

Flash Flood Warnings in 2025: What You Need to Know

Flash floods are among the most dangerous weather events, and in 2025, their frequency and severity have escalated across many parts of the United States. Fueled by a changing climate, urban development, and extreme rainfall, flash floods have become a growing concern for both urban and rural areas.

Record-Breaking Flash Flood Alerts in 2025

Trump Plans to Phase Out FEMA After Hurricane Season

📉 Trump Plans to Phase Out FEMA After 2025 Hurricane Season

Former President Donald Trump has announced plans to phase out FEMA following the 2025 hurricane season, arguing that the agency wastes billions and that disaster response should be handled by state governors. Critics warn that this move could severely impact disaster readiness across the country.

💸 FEMA Spending: By the Numbers

  • FY 2025 Total Budget Authority: $33.1 billion
  • Disaster Relief Fund (DRF): $22.7 billion allocated for major disasters
  • Operating Budget: $5.2 billion
  • FY 2020 Peak Spending: $47 billion due to COVID-19, wildfires, and hurricanes
  • 30-Year Average: Around $20 billion annually
  • FY 2023 Spending: $29.5 billion

📦 Examples of FEMA Waste

  • 2004: $21 million reimbursed in Miami-Dade for items like TVs and vehicles—despite minimal storm damage
  • Post-Katrina: $85 million in unused supplies stored and wasted
  • Millions spent on bottled water that never reached impacted zones

🌪️ What's Behind the Plan?

  • Trump: “If governors can’t handle disasters, maybe they shouldn’t be governors.”
  • FEMA criticized as bureaucratic, wasteful, and politically biased
  • Proposal would shift response duties to states and fund them directly through DHS or White House channels

🚨 Potential Consequences

Impact Area Consequence
State Budgets Disaster costs shift to states, risking higher taxes and service cuts
Low-Income Communities Reduced federal aid could slow recovery and widen inequalities
National Coordination Fragmented response to multi-state or large-scale disasters

🌊 And It’s an Active Hurricane Year

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) forecasts an above-average Atlantic hurricane season in 2025, with up to 10 hurricanes expected. Phasing out FEMA during this volatile season could increase risks dramatically.

⚠️ Final Thoughts

While Trump's plan is designed to cut costs and decentralize disaster response, data shows FEMA plays a massive role in funding and coordinating national relief. Any phase-out should be carefully considered to avoid severe humanitarian and economic fallout in the wake of disasters.