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Journal ArticleOpen Access

Disparities in exposure to hydrogeomorphic hazards in Bangladesh

Author Affiliations
University of Oxford, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, University of Cambridge, Centre for Sustainable Energy
Published InNature Communications
Year2025
Citations1

Abstract

Natural hazards can impair socio-economic development. While population exposure to various natural hazards has been quantified, the exposure to hydrogeomorphic hazards – involving water-induced landscape changes – remains unknown. Using high-resolution hydrogeomorphic modelling, combined with population and wealth data, this study provides a national-scale spatial assessment of exposure to hydrogeomorphic hazards across population and wealth groups, taking Bangladesh as a case study. Bangladesh is an exceptionally geo-dynamic country, where multiple hazards coincide with a dense population (1300 people per km2) and a high poverty rate (20%). Here we show that over 22 million people, making up 13% of the population, live within hydrogeomorphically unstable regions. Of the 22 million, 86% are within the lowest wealth groups of the population. Given…
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