Disasters in 2017 set U.S. record

$306B in total damage caused largely by 3 hurricanes, wildfires

Firefighter Ryan Spencer battles a wildfi re along a hillside in La Conchita, Calif., last month. Wildfires along the West Coast helped raise the total bill for last year’s weather disasters to $306 billion in the United States.
Firefighter Ryan Spencer battles a wildfi re along a hillside in La Conchita, Calif., last month. Wildfires along the West Coast helped raise the total bill for last year’s weather disasters to $306 billion in the United States.

Hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria combined with devastating Western wildfires and other natural catastrophes to make 2017 the most expensive year on record for disasters, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported Monday.

The disasters caused $306 billion in total damage in 2017, with 16 separate events that caused more than $1 billion in damage each. The bulk of the damage, at $265 billion, came from hurricanes.

"2017 was a historic year for billion-dollar weather and climate disasters," said Adam Smith, an economist for the agency, on a media call with reporters.

The record-breaking year raises concerns about the effects of future natural disasters, as scientists fear climate change could make extreme weather events more damaging.

Hurricane Harvey, which sparked extreme flooding in Houston and the surrounding area in August and September, caused $125 billion in damage, the year's most expensive disaster. Hurricane Maria, which in September set off a fatal and ongoing humanitarian crisis in the U.S. territory of Puerto Rico and elsewhere, caused $90 billion in damage. Hurricane Irma raked across the Caribbean and hit Florida in September and caused $50 billion in total damage, the agency reports.

The storms also caused 251 combined deaths, the report found. According to Smith, hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria now join 2005's Katrina and 2012's Sandy among the top five most costly U.S. hurricanes in the agency's disaster record.

Western wildfires cost another $18 billion and 54 lives, the report found. This, too, was an annual record. Other large costs came from tornadoes, droughts, flooding and other severe weather events.

The previous most expensive disaster year was 2005, when events such as Hurricane Katrina caused $215 billion in U.S. damage when adjusted for inflation. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's record of billion-dollar natural disasters goes back to 1980.

According to the agency, there have been 215 U.S. disasters costing $1 billion or more since 1980, for a total of more than $1.2 trillion in damage. The year 2017 tied 2011 for the largest total number of such events, at 16.

With numbers like the ones above, the insurance industry also took a hit during 2017, thanks in large part to the trio of hurricanes that ravaged parts of the Caribbean, Puerto Rico and parts of the South.

Insurers are set to pay out a record $135 billion stemming from natural disasters around the globe last year, according to data released earlier this month from the world's largest reinsurer. Widespread flooding caused by monsoon rains in South Asia also contributed to the costs, as did a severe earthquake in Mexico, according to Munich Re, a German-based reinsurer.

Overall losses, which include uninsured losses, amounted to about $330 billion, the reinsurer said. That is second only to 2011, when an earthquake and tsunami in Japan fueled overall losses of more than $350 billion in today's dollars.

The firm identified 710 natural catastrophes around the globe, significantly higher than the annual average of 605. But those in the United States were by far the most costly, accounting for roughly half of all insurance payouts.

"Some of the catastrophic events, such as the series of three extremely damaging hurricanes, or the very severe flooding in South Asia after extraordinarily heavy monsoon rains, are giving us a foretaste of what is to come," Torsten Jeworrek, a Munich Re board member, said in an announcement about the global losses. "Because even though individual events cannot be directly traced to climate change, our experts expect such extreme weather to occur more often in future."

Indeed, the key question underlying the latest tally of disaster cost is to what extent climate change may be driving the United States and the rest of the world toward more numerous or more severe disasters.

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration experts demurred on this question on a media call, declining to apportion how much of the damage could be attributed to a changing climate as opposed to other factors. One key factor that is also known to be worsening damage is that there is more valuable infrastructure, such as homes and businesses, in harm's way -- along coastlines or in areas vulnerable to wildfire.

"For the purposes especially of this product, we do not try to parse those apart," said Deke Arndt, chief of the monitoring section at the agency's National Centers for Environmental Information. "We're more interested in quantifying what's going on. Both the economists and physical scientists will retrospectively look at that, but those sort of happen at the speed of science."

A Section on 01/09/2018

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