Natural-disaster risk in Canada

In Canada, the leading natural-disaster exposures are extreme cold / winter, wildfire, flooding. The safest city for disasters is St. John's (safety 81/100). Risk is modelled from real USGS counts of magnitude-4.5+ earthquakes within 300 km since 1980 plus Köppen climate zones and cyclone/subduction geography.
Canada — average disaster exposure by type (1-5)
2Quake2Flood1Storm2Wildfire1Heat1Drought4Cold1Tsunami

Safest cities in Canada from natural disasters

FAQ

Is Canada safe from natural disasters?

Across 30 cities in Canada, the highest average exposure is extreme cold / winter (3.9/5). Safest city: St. John's (safety 81/100).

What natural disasters affect Canada?

By modelled average tier: extreme cold / winter 3.9/5; wildfire 2.1/5; flooding 2.0/5; earthquake 1.6/5; tsunami 1.3/5; drought 1.1/5; storms (hurricane/cyclone) 1.0/5; extreme heat 1.0/5.

Which city in Canada is safest from natural disasters?

St. John's, with the lowest combined hazard exposure in our data.

All cities in Canada →