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See all EU institutions and bodiesThis indicator considers the number of fatalities, the overall and insured economic losses from weather- and climate-related events in the EEA member countries.. Hazards considered are those classified as meteorological hazards, hydrological hazards and climatological hazards, based on the classification by the International Council for Science (ICSU).
Datasets
Climate related economic losses (1980-2023)Microsoft Excel (.xls, .xlsx)ascii (.csv, .txt, .sql)
Published: 21 Jan 2025
Temporal coverage: 1980-2023
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Economic losses from climate-related extremes in Europe
Superseded or restricted datasets
Climate related economic losses_superseded (1980-2023)Microsoft Excel (.xls, .xlsx)ascii (.csv, .txt, .sql)Archived
Published: 5 Nov 2024
Temporal coverage: 1980-2023
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Economic losses from climate-related extremes in Europe
Climate related economic losses_superseded (1980-2023)Microsoft Excel (.xls, .xlsx)ascii (.csv, .txt, .sql)Archived
Published: 19 Dec 2024
Temporal coverage: 1980-2023
Download:
Links:
Economic losses from climate-related extremes in Europe
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Climate related hazards
This series refers to datasets related to the potential occurrence of a climate-induced physical event or trend that may cause loss of life, injury, or other health impacts, as well as damage and loss to property, infrastructure, livelihoods, service provision, ecosystems and environmental resources.
It includes datasets on flooding, drought, urban heat island and heatwaves, extreme temperatures and precipitations, fire danger as well as climate suitability for vectors of infectious diseases.
The datasets are part of the European Climate Adaptation Platform (Climate-ADAPT) accessible here: https://climate-adapt.eea.europa.eu/
Economic losses from climate-related extremes in Europe
This series covers the economic losses and the number of fatalities from weather- and climate-related events in EU Member States and EEA member countries. Weather- and climate-related hazards considered are those types classified as meteorological hazards (e.g. storms), hydrological hazards (e.g. floods) and climatological hazards (e.g. heatwaves) based on the classification by the International Council for Science (ICSU).
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