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Posted: 2024-05-24 09:27:58

More than 100 people are estimated to have died in a huge landslide that struck the remote village of Kaokalam in Papua New Guinea's Enga province on Friday.

It's the latest in a series of deadly landslides to have occurred in the country in recent months, after 14 people were buried alive in Simbu province in April, and at least 21 people died in three separate landslides across the country in mid-March.

Sadly, the fatalities are not a new development for Papua New Guinea, which regularly experiences fatal landslides that don't make headlines beyond its borders.

Let's take a look at why PNG is so prone to this type of natural disaster, why it costs so many lives, and what the rest of the world can do to help.

Why does PNG see so many landslides?

Dave Petley, vice-chancellor of the University of Hull in the United Kingdom, is a globally recognised expert on landslides who runs The Landslide Blog for science magazine Eos.

He attributes PNG's regular landslides to a number of specific factors, chief amongst them being the country's deeply weathered, mountainous terrain and tropical climate.

Heavy rain and storms lead to increased erosion, flooding and higher tides, all of which raise the chance of dangerous rockfalls, he says.

Add to that the fact that the country sits on the Ring of Fire — a string of active volcanoes and high seismic activity that runs along the border of two tectonic plates in the Pacific — and you have perfect landslide conditions.

"You have regular significant earthquakes, which of course trigger landslides in their own right, but also weaken the rock slope," Professor Petley says.

"The whole area is very tectonically active."

Part of a road on the side of a hill collapsed.

A collapsed road following an earthquake in central Papua New Guinea in 2018.(Supplied: Melvin Levongo)

Why have so many people lost their lives?

The factors that make landslides so common in Papua New Guinea are certainly problematic, but they are by no means unique to the country.

The reality is landslides occur fairly regularly in certain regions of the world.

Countries where they are common include the United States, Japan, Italy, Austria and Switzerland — hilly or mountainous countries with inclement weather.

So why does PNG in particular seem to experience deadly incidents so regularly?

People who study the issue have long been able to draw a connection between landslide fatalities and economic development — as is the case with earthquakes, and most natural disasters in general.

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