This article is a list of environmental disasters. In this context it is an annotated list of specific events caused by human activity that results in a negative effect on the environment.
Environmental disasters by category
Agricultural
Africanized bees, known colloquially as "killer bees"
Mismanagement and shrinking of the Aral Sea
"Dirty dairying" in New Zealand
Dust Bowl in central United States (1930s)
Great sparrow campaign; sparrows were eliminated from Chinese farms, which caused locusts to swarm the farms and contributed to a famine which killed 38 million people.
Gulf of Mexico dead zone
Salinity in Australia
Salinization of the Fertile Crescent
Salton Sea California, U.S.
Biodiversity
2006 Zakouma elephant slaughter
Chestnut blight
Indian vulture crisis due to Diclofenac
Deforestation of Easter Island
Destruction of the old growth forests
Devil facial tumour disease
Dutch Elm Disease
Emerald Ash Borer
Environmental threats to the Great Barrier Reef
Extinction of Australian megafauna
Four Pests Campaign of China, 1958
Ghost nets
Grounding of SS Makambo on Lord Howe Island
Gulf of Mexico dead zone
Invasive species in New Zealand
Introduction of the Nile perch into Lake Victoria in Africa, devastating indigenous fish species
Introduction of nutria to Louisiana
Kudzu in the United States
Loss of Louisiana Wetlands
Mercury contamination in Grassy Narrows
Rabbits in Australia
Red imported fire ants
Reduction in the number of the American Bison
Shark finning
The Saemangeum Seawall
The loss of biodiversity of New Zealand
Human health
Agent Orange use by the United States during the Vietnam War, resulting in lasting serious health effects on the Vietnamese population, such as cancer, nervous system disorders, and countless related fatalities
Cancer Alley
Goiânia accident, human deaths resulting from dismantling a scrapped medical machine containing a source of radioactivity
Health effects arising from the September 11 attacks
Introduction of infectious diseases by Europeans causing the death of indigenous people during European colonization of the Americas
Introduction of the bubonic plague (the Plague of Justinian) in Europe from Africa in the 7th century resulting in the death of up to 60% (100 million) of the population.
Introduction of the bubonic plague (the Black Death) in Europe from Central Asia in the 14th century resulting in the death of up to 60% (200 million) of the population and recurring until the 18th century.
Mercury contamination in Grassy Narrows
Industrial
1912 Itai-itai disease, due to cadmium poisoning in Japan
1948 Donora smog
1952 The Great Smog in London
1962 to 1970 Mercury contamination in Grassy Narrows
1970 Ontario Minamata disease in Canada
1976 Seveso disaster, chemical plant explosion, caused highest known exposure to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (TCDD) in residential populations
1983 Times Beach, Missouri the town was completely evacuated due to a dioxin contamination
1984 Bhopal disaster (December 3, 1984, India), leak of methyl isocyanate resulted in more than 22,000 deaths.
1986 Sandoz chemical spill into the Rhine river
1989 Phillips Disasters
1990, Release of cyanide, heavy metals and acid into the Alamosa River, Colorado, from the Summitville mine, causing the death of all aquatic life 17 miles downstream.
1991, California's largest hazardous chemical spill: A 19,000-gallon (72,000 L) tank railroad car containing the pesticide/herbicide metam sodium derails from a northbound Southern Pacific freight train, tumbling off the bridge over the Sacramento River at the Cantara Loop near Dunsmuir, California, and rupturing on the rocks below, spilling the car's entire load into the river. Virtually every aquatic organism on a 40-mile (64 km) stretch of river was killed.
2000 Baia Mare cyanide spill of a gold mine in Romania, January 2000
2001 AZF Toulouse chemical factory explosion
2003 Release of sulfur dioxide at the Al-Mishraq plant in Iraq
2012 Guangxi cadmium spill China, when toxic cadmium contaminated the Guangxi Longjiang river (龙江河) and water supply.
2015 Shenzhen landslide China, a landslide of construction waste at Shenzhen.
2018 Fujian Quangang Carbon Nine leakage event China
Baogang Tailings Dam China
Cancer Alley
Environmental issues with the Three Gorges Dam
Health issues on the Aamjiwnaang First Nation due to chemical factories
Love Canal toxic waste site
Minamata disease (1950s and 1960s) mercury poisoning in Japan
Kodaikanal mercury poisoning in India
Release of CFCs resulting in ozone depletion
Spring Valley, which was used as a chemical weapons testing ground during World War I.
Sydney Tar Ponds and Coke Ovens sites in the city of Sydney, Nova Scotia, Canada, known as the largest toxic waste site in North America.
United States Environmental Protection Agency Superfund sites in the United States
Mining
Summitville mine in Colorado, from 1870 to 1992
Iron Mountain Mine in California, from 1879 to 1963
Argonaut Mine in California, from 1893 to 1942
Lead & Zinc mining in northeast Oklahoma / southeast Kansas / southwest Missouri, from 1900s to 1960s
Copper mining in Tasmania, from 1893 to 1994
Phosphate mining in Nauru, from 1906 to the 1990s
Phosphate mining in St. Pierre Island from 1906 to 1972
1947 Centralia mine disaster, a coal mine in Illinois
Centralia mine fire, Pennsylvania, burning since 1962
Mountaintop removal mining in the US since the 1960s
Aberfan disaster, collapse of a coal mining waste pile in Wales, 1966
Tui mine, tailings dam from the now abandoned in New Zealand, 1966 to 2013
Darvaza gas crater in Derweze, Turkmenistan, burning since 1971
Uranium mining controversy in Kakadu National Park in Australia, 1981 to 2009
Ok Tedi environmental disaster in Papua New Guinea beginning in 1984
Omai gold mine tailing dam breach in Guyana, 1995
Marcopper mining disaster in the Philippines, March 1996
Doñana disaster, tailings dam breach of the Los Frailes zinc/silver mine in Spain, April 1998
Aitik mine, tailings dam failure in Sweden, September 2000
Martin County sludge spill in Kentucky, October 2000
Magellan Metals mine, lead dust in Australia, 2006
Upper Big Branch Mine disaster in West Virginia, April 2010
Padcal tailings spills of August-September 2012
Talvivaara gypsum pond leak, Finland, 2012
Obed Mountain coal mine spill in Alberta, Canada, October 2013
2015 Gold King Mine waste water spill in Colorado, August 2015
Mariana dam disaster, Samarco iron ore mine tailings dam failure, Minas Gerais and Espirito Santo to the Atlantic sea. Brazil, November 2015
Orinoco Mining Arc, Venezuela, February 2016
Brumadinho dam disaster of an iron ore mine in Brazil, January 2019
Hpakant jade mine disaster landslide of tailings into waterway in Myanmar, July 2020
Oil industry
Lakeview Gusher oil spill in California, 1910 –1911
Leaded gasoline introduced 1920s; phased out globally by 2012.
Greenpoint oil spill in Brooklyn, New York, 1940s–1980
Mississippi River oil spill (1962–1963)
Torrey Canyon oil spill off the SW coast of the United Kingdom, February 1967
Lago Agrio oil field spills in Ecuador, since 1972 (possibly the worst of all)
MV Sea Star and Horta Barbosa tankers collision and oil spill into the Gulf of Oman, December 1972
Jakob Maersk oil spill off the coast of Portugal, January 1975
Environmental issues in the Niger Delta relating to the oil industry, 1976–1996
Arctic Refuge drilling controversy, since 1977
Amoco Cadiz shipwreck and oil spill off the coast of Brittany, France, March 1978
Ixtoc I oil spill into the Gulf of Mexico, June 1979
SS Atlantic Empress collision and spill near Trinidad and Tobago, August 1979
MT Independența collision and spill near Istanbul, November 1979
Nowruz oil spills into the Persian Gulf, March 1983
Castillo de Bellver oil spill off the coast of South Africa, August 1983
Odyssey tanker shipwreck and oil spill, off the coast of Nova Scotia, November 1988
Exxon Valdez oil spill in the Prince William Sound, Alaska, March 1989
Gulf War oil spill into the Persian Gulf, January 1991
MT Haven explosion and oil spill of the coast of Italy, April 1991
ABT Summer explosion and oil spill off the coast of Angola, May 1991
Mingbulak oil spill in Uzbekistan, March 1992
MV Braer shipwreck and oil spill at the Shetland Islands, January 1993
Taylor oil spill off the coast of Louisiana, since 2004
Sidoarjo mud flow triggered by Lapindo Brantas gas exploration in 2006; East Java, Indonesia
Deepwater Horizon oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico, April to July 2010
2010 ExxonMobil oil spill in the Niger Delta in Nigeria, May 2010
Jebel al-Zayt oil spill in the Red Sea, June 2010
Xingang Port oil spill into the Yellow Sea, July 2010
Sanchi oil tanker collision in the East China Sea, January 2018
Norilsk oil spill in Siberia in Russia in between May and June 2020.
MV Wakashio oil spill in south Mauritius, since July 2020
El Palito oil spill off the coast of Venezuela, since July 2020
Nuclear
Chernobyl disaster in 1986 in Chernobyl, Ukraine killed 49 people and was estimated to have damaged almost $7 billion of property". Radioactive fallout from the accident concentrated near Belarus, Ukraine and Russia and at least 350,000 people were forcibly resettled away from these areas. After the accident, "traces of radioactive deposits unique to Chernobyl were found in nearly every country in the northern hemisphere".
Fukushima Daiichi nuclear disaster: Following an earthquake, tsunami, and failure of cooling systems at Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant and issues concerning other nuclear facilities in Japan on March 11, 2011, a nuclear emergency was declared. This was the first time a nuclear emergency had been declared in Japan, and 140,000 residents within 20 km of the plant were evacuated. Explosions and a fire have resulted in dangerous levels of radiation, sparking a stock market collapse and panic-buying in supermarkets.
Mayak nuclear waste storage tank explosion, (Chelyabinsk, Soviet Union, September 29, 1957), 200+ people died and 270,000 people were exposed to dangerous radiation levels. Over thirty small communities had been removed from Soviet maps between 1958 and 1991.
Windscale fire, United Kingdom, October 8, 1957. Fire ignites plutonium piles and contaminates surrounding dairy farms.
Soviet submarine K-431 accident, August 10, 1985 (10 people died and 49 suffered radiation injuries).
Soviet submarine K-19 accident, July 4, 1961 (8 deaths and more than 30 people were over-exposed to radiation).
Nuclear testing at Moruroa and Fangataufa in the Pacific Ocean
Fallout from the Castle Bravo nuclear test at Bikini Atoll in the Marshall Islands
The health of Downwinders
Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki Within the first two to four months of the bombings, the acute effects killed 90,000–166,000 people in Hiroshima and 60,000–80,000 in Nagasaki, with roughly half of the deaths in each city occurring on the first day.
Three Mile Island, 1979 - It is the most significant accident in U.S. commercial nuclear power plant history. On the seven-point International Nuclear Event Scale, it is rated Level 5 – Accident with Wider Consequences.
Hanford Nuclear, 1986 – The U.S. government declassifies 19,000 pages of documents indicating that between 1946 and 1986, the Hanford Site near Richland, Washington, released thousands of US gallons of radioactive liquids. Radioactive waste was both released into the air and flowed into the Columbia River (which flows to the Pacific Ocean). In 2014, the Hanford legacy continues with billions of dollars spent annually in a seemingly endless cleanup of leaking underground
Air/land/water
Proliferation of plastic shopping bags
Hong Kong Plastic Disaster
Air
The 1983 Melbourne dust storm
The 1997 Southeast Asian haze
The 2005 Malaysian haze
The 2006 Southeast Asian haze
The 2016 Great Smog of Delhi
The 2019 Amazon rainforest wildfires
Cancer Alley
The Donora Smog of 1948
The Great Smog of 1952
Health problems due to the Jinkanpo Atsugi Incinerator
Kuwaiti oil fires
Yokkaichi asthma
Land
Dust Bowl in central United States (1930s)
Contaminated soils in Mapua, New Zealand, due to the operation of an agricultural chemicals factory from 1932 to 1989
Basin F, a disposal site in the United States created in 1956 for contaminated liquid wastes from the chemical manufacturing operations of the Army and its lessee Shell Chemicals company
Coastal erosion in Louisiana
Nigeria gully erosion crisis, since before 1980
Exide lead contamination at seven locations in the United States, since 1989
Electronic waste in Guiyu, since the 1990s
2006 Côte d'Ivoire toxic waste dump
In Thathri Disaster 2023, the land and residential houses started cracking in Nayi Basti Thathri of Jammu and Kashmir, India.
Water
Amoco Cadiz oil spill off the coast of France in 1978
Cheakamus River derailment which polluted a river with caustic soda
Deepwater Horizon oil spill
Diamond Alkali dumping of "bad batches" of the herbicide Agent Orange and byproducts of its production into the Passaic River during the 1960s and 1970s, contaminating river sediments with 2,3,7,8-Tetrachlorodibenzodioxin, PCBs, and PAHs. Diamond Alkali was added to the EPA's National Priorities List in 1987 and cleanup of the Lower Passaic is still underway.
Draining and development of the Everglades
Draining of the Mesopotamian Marshes in the 1990s
DuPont dumping of perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) in Parkersburg, West Virginia, USA 1951-2003.
Effects of polluted water in the Berkeley Pit in the United States
Gulf of Mexico dead zone
Ignition and conflagration (13 times from 1868 to 1969) of the Cuyahoga River in Ohio, United States
The Jiyeh Power Station oil spill in the Mediterranean region
Lake Okeechobee is heavily polluted and during extreme events releases large volumes of polluted water into the St. Lucie River estuary and the Caloosahatchee River estuary.
Loss of Louisiana Wetlands due to Mississippi River levees, saltwater intrusion through manmade channels, timber harvesting, subsidence, and hurricane damage.
Mercury contamination in Grassy Narrows pollution of Wabigoon River
Oder environmental disaster in 2022
Red Hill water crisis in Hawaiʻi, United States beginning in November 2021
Sandoz chemical spill, severely polluting the Rhine in 1986
Selenium poisoning of wildlife due to farm runoff used to create Kesterson National Wildlife Refuge, and the artificial wetland
Marine
Coral bleaching
Gulf of Mexico Dead Zone due to high-nutrient fertilizer runoff from the Midwest that is drained through the Mississippi River.
The artificial Osborne Reef off the coast of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, in the United States
Dumping of conventional and chemical munitions in Beaufort's Dyke, a sea trench between Northern Ireland and Scotland
Marine debris
Environmental threats to the Great Barrier Reef
Nurdles, plastic pellet typically under 5mm in diameter
The Great Pacific Garbage Patch
Minamata disease, mercury poisoning in Japan
Mercury in fish
Ocean acidification due to anthropogenic greenhouse gas emissions
2022 Caspian seal die-off
Industrial waste dumping in Central Vietnam from Formosa Ha Tinh Steel, which kills tons of marine creatures and destroys the ecosystem