Bangladesh - Still reeling one week after cyclone

29.05.2020 570 views
Rezaul Islam wades through waist-high water, a sack of rice on his head salvaged from what remains of his home, a week after a cyclone savaged Bangladesh and eastern India. The strongest storm to hit the area this century killed more than 100 people, flattening entire villages, uprooting trees and ruined fish ponds in the Indian state of West Bengal, and south-west Bangladesh. "We are trying to salvage whatever we can," 17-year-old Islam told AFP, his house still half-submerged in water left by storm surges unleashed by Cyclone Amphan. With homes destroyed or uninhabitable, more than 200,000 people in India and at least 100,000 in Bangladesh remain crammed into cyclone shelters -- often with little regard to coronavirus precautions. The most damage caused by Amphan was from the accompanying storm surge, which wrecked several hundred kilometres of embankments that are supposed to protect homes and farms in low-lying coastal areas. Locals worked through the night when the cyclone hit, desperately trying to shore up levees with sandbags. It was mostly to no avail. Tens of thousands of acres of farmland, fruit plantations and farms have been devastated by the saltwater. In the Bangladeshi town of Koira, thousands of families have been trying for days to retrieve belongings from what remains of their homes in the now-desolate landscape. Many buildings had roofs ripped off by the 165-kilometre-per-hour winds. Source - https://www.freshplaza.com
02.06.2026

Canada - Producers urged to contact SCIC over crop insurance seeding deadlines

It’s been a stressful spring for some farmers as wet conditions and delayed seeding put the growing season behind schedule. 

02.06.2026

India - Apple growers’ hopeful as Govt revives weather-based CIS plan

The Jammu and Kashmir government’s decision to revive a weather-based crop insurance scheme has sparked fresh hope among apple growers, many of whom have been demanding a reliable protection mechanism against mounting weather-related losses.

02.06.2026

Lao PDR ties drought insurance payouts to early warning triggers

Drought reaches 1.2 million people a year – and the losses run into the hundreds of millions.

02.06.2026

Rising heat fuels fires across Morocco, causing deaths and widespread damage

A series of fires has affected several areas across Morocco in recent days, driven by rising temperatures that have accelerated their spread.

02.06.2026

Cytora and Treefera bring crop data to insurance risk

Cytora, the digital risk processing platform, has announced a strategic partnership with Treefera, an AI-powered first-mile intelligence platform, to embed granular agricultural and nature-based asset data directly into commercial insurance underwriting workflows.

02.06.2026

India - 10K farmers to receive Rs 75,000 per hectare

In a major relief measure for Delhi’s farming community, the Delhi Cabinet has approved a significant increase in compensation for crop losses caused by last year’s heavy monsoon rains and waterlogging, raising the ex-gratia assistance rate to Rs 75,000 per hectare.