Guest guest Posted August 29, 2006 Report Share Posted August 29, 2006 At 09:52 AM 8/29/06, you wrote: >Eco-Economy Update 2006-8 >For Immediate Release >August 29, 2006 > > >HURRICANE DAMAGES SOAR TO NEW LEVELS > >Insurance Companies Abandoning Homeowners in High-Risk Coastal Area > >http://www.earth-policy.org/Updates/2006/Update58.htm > > >Janet Larsen > > >Damage from hurricanes is soaring off the charts, bankrupting insurance >companies and depriving property owners of insurance in high-risk areas. >During the 1960s, worldwide damage from windstorms with economic losses of >$1 billion or more totaled just $4 billion. In the 1970s the figure rose >to $7 billion, and in the 1980s it topped $24 billion. Next came the >1990s, when hurricane losses soared to $113 billion. Then during the six >years from 2000 to 2005, hurricanes left a staggering bill of $273 >billion. (See data at www.earthpolicy.org/Updates/2006/Update58_data.htm.) > >Two trends are largely responsible for the growing costs of windstorm >disasters. One, rapid coastal development is bringing more people and more >expensive infrastructure into vulnerable areas. And two, hurricanes >(called typhoons in the western Pacific) are growing stronger and lasting >longer, fueled by higher sea surface temperatures. They are also widening >their geographic range, invading areas previously considered safe from the >wrath of windstorms. > >Last year was the worst ever for storm-stricken areas and the companies >that insure them. Losses from the eight major storms of 2005 exceeded $170 >billion, half of which was insured. Three of the storms were in the >Pacific, but the Atlantic storms racked up 98 percent of the economic costs. > >The unusually long North Atlantic hurricane season that extended from June >into the New Year brought a record 28 named storms, taking us through the >alphabet and into Greek letters. This is nearly three times the average >annual number of storms over the past century. Fueled by high surface >water temperatures, four hurricanes--Emily, Katrina, Rita, and >Wilma--reached maximum strength, the highest number of Category 5 storms >ever in a single season. > >Hurricane Katrina, which struck the Gulf Coast of the United States in >late August 2005,was the most financially devastating storm on record, >with damages from winds and the record storm surge exceeding $125 billion. >Although Katrina reached top wind speeds of 175 miles (282 kilometers) per >hour, it had weakened to Category 3 by the time it hit the U.S. Gulf >Coast. Powerful Rita’s arrival a few weeks later marked the first time two >Category 5 storms developed in the Gulf of Mexico in one season. Then came >Wilma, which devastated parts of Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula and went down >in history as the most intense Atlantic storm ever. > >Storms in 2005 were not only strong, they were more widespread. Hurricane >Vince, which struck Spain in October, traveled farther north and east than >any Atlantic tropical cyclone. A month later, Tropical Storm Delta also >moved into uncharted territory for Atlantic hurricanes, crossing the >Canary Islands. Stronger storms in unexpected places, like these and >Brazil’s 2004 Hurricane Catarina, the first hurricane recorded in the >South Atlantic, are prompting insurance companies to rewrite their >catastrophe models. > >Of the 90 or so tropical cyclones that are born each year, about half grow >strong enough to be classified as hurricanes. The ingredients needed to >whip up a hurricane are sea surface temperatures of at least 79 degrees >Fahrenheit (26 degrees Celsius) and favorable wind conditions. Higher sea >surface temperatures drive more-powerful storms. > >Over the last three decades, tropical ocean surface temperatures have >risen by nearly 1 degree Fahrenheit (half a degree Celsius), an increase >of a scale not seen in at least 150 years and perhaps unprecedented over >several thousand years. Kerry Emanuel of the Massachusetts Institute of >Technology reports that hurricanes and typhoons in the Atlantic and North >Pacific have doubled in power over this period. Storms are also lasting >longer than before. And as temperatures rise from increased greenhouse gas >emissions, even stronger storms are on the horizon. Warmer air also holds >more water vapor, increasing rainfall and thus flooding. > >Already more hurricanes are reaching the top-rated Category 4 and 5 >strengths. Scientists from the Georgia Institute of Technology have shown >that in ocean basins around the world, one out of every three hurricanes >in the 1990s and early 2000s became that powerful, compared with fewer >than one out of every five during the late 1970s and 1980s. Stronger >storms are disproportionately more destructive. While a Category 1 storm >has wind speeds of 7495 miles per hour and can result in a storm surge of >some 4 feet (1.2 meters) above normal, a Category 5 storm--with double the >wind speed--can bring on a storm surge of more than 18 feet. > >The recent spate of powerful hurricanes in the southern United States has >put many insurers out of business or into liquidation, leaving customers >scrambling to find new coverage, an increasingly difficult endeavor. Many >hurricane-prone property owners are facing a doubling or tripling of >insurance rates over the next several years. The world’s largest insurer, >American International Group Inc., is no longer taking on new policies in >some Gulf Coast communities. Allstate, one of Florida’s largest insurers, >dropped 95,000 policies in 2005 and plans to drop an additional 120,000 >this year. As state or federal insurers jump in to cover properties that >private companies will no longer touch, essentially subsidizing >development in risk-prone areas, they often incur large deficits that >someone, generally the taxpayer, must cover. > >Not only are southern states affected: Allstate is dropping 28,000 of its >New York policyholders as well. Neither Allstate nor MetLife will take on >additional customers on Long Island, New York, which was the direct target >of the legendary 1938 “Long Island Express” Category 3 hurricane. >According to AIR Worldwide, a risk-modeling and technology firm that >serves the insurance industry, a Category 5 storm hitting the New York >area today would incur $96 billion in losses. In Miami, a storm of that >strength would rack up a bill of $155 billion. > >More than 40 percent of the U.S. population resides in coastal counties, >many of which are growing fast. The country’s most rapid population growth >has been in Florida, the state most at risk from hurricanes, with 1,350 >miles of coastline and no point farther than 80 miles from the water. The >population along the hurricane-prone coast between North Carolina and >Texas more than tripled, from 10 million to nearly 35 million, over the >past 50 years. > >One in every 10 people on the planet lives in an extremely vulnerable zone >within 60 miles of a coastline and less than 33 feet above sea level, and >more people seem to be heading in that direction. In developing countries, >where insurance now covers less than 2 percent of the costs of “natural” >disasters (compared with the United States, where half are insured), >hurricanes can set back development by decades. When Hurricane Mitch hit >Honduras and Nicaragua in 1998, for example, it took more than 11,000 >lives and left a destruction bill exceeding the two countries’ gross >domestic products. > >Stronger storms coupled with larger vulnerable populations represent a >recipe for economic and humanitarian disaster. The $273 billion in damages >from major storms so far this decade will continue climbing. Departing >from the temperatures we have known means that the past can no longer be >used as a guide to the future. Climate patterns become more difficult to >anticipate and the risks harder to predict. > >At some point, the human tides may turn and more people may move inland, >as we have recently seen with the abandonment of communities ravaged by >Katrina. In the meantime, the question becomes not whether we can afford >to reduce the carbon emissions that are raising the earth’s temperature, >but whether we can afford not to. > ># # # > >Additional data and information sources at www.earthpolicy.org or contact >jlarsen (at) earthpolicy.org > >For reprint permission contact rjk (at) earthpolicy.org > > > >--- > >--- >You are currently d to public as: thehavens >To send a blank email to >leave-public-1365209M > > >--- >Incoming mail is certified Virus Free. >Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). >Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 ****** Kraig and Shirley Carroll ... in the woods of SE Kentucky http://www.thehavens.com/ thehavens 606-376-3363 --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.859 / Virus Database: 585 - Release 2/14/05 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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