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Humanitarian Assistance

Assistant Administrator, Nancy Lindborg in Tacloban City-Typhoon Haiyan
USAID Assistant Administrator Nancy Lindborg with evacuees outside Tacloban airport. Evacuees are flown to Manila aboard military cargo planes that transport emergency supplies to Tacloban. Very few C-130s leave the airport empty.
USAID/OFDA

The Philippines is one of the world’s most disaster prone countries, particularly vulnerable to tropical cyclones and floods, earthquakes, landslides and volcanic eruptions. The country hosts about 300 volcanoes, of which 23 are considered active. On average the country experiences 20 tropical typhoons a year, which is the highest frequency in the world. The Philippines is situated between two major active fault lines and experiences a high level of seismic activity.

Natural disasters can easily wipe-out development gains in the country. In 2009 the losses during tropical storms Ondoy and Pepeng were estimated to be 2.7 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). In the last two decades, more than 25 thousand people lost their lives and the country suffered economic losses of more than $14 billion. The year 2013 was also a devastating year for the Philippines. The Government of the Philippines (GPH) was overwhelmed with responding to the effects of 20 typhoons, displacement in Zamboanga City due to conflict and armed incidents, and a magnitude 7.2 earthquake in the Central Visayas. Typhoon Haiyan (Yolanda), one of the most powerful typhoons on record, made its landfall in the Eastern Visayas on November 8, 2013, causing unprecedented destruction and massive loss of human life in the Philippines.

Please click the link: http://www.usaid.gov/philippines/fact-sheets/disaster-assistance-and-resilience-building to view or download the full Philippine's Disaster Assistance and Resilience Building fact sheet.