Multi-Billion-dollar weather disasters smash US record
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Perilous
Times and Climate Change
Multi-Billion-dollar weather disasters smash US record
Published December 07, 2011
| Associated Press
WASHINGTON – America smashed the record for multi-billion-dollar
weather disasters this year with a deadly dozen — and counting.
With an almost biblical onslaught of twisters, floods, snow,
drought, heat and wildfire, the U.S. in 2011 has seen more weather
catastrophes that caused at least $1 billion in damage than it did
in all of the 1980s, even after the dollar figures from back then
are adjusted for inflation.
The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration added two
disasters to the list Wednesday, bringing the total to 12. The two
are the Texas, New Mexico and Arizona wildfires and the mid-June
tornadoes and severe weather.
NOAA uses $1 billion as a benchmark for the worst weather
disasters.
Extreme weather in America this year has killed more than 1,000
people, according to National Weather Service Director Jack Hayes.
The dozen billion-dollar disasters alone add up to $52 billion.
The old record for $1 billion disasters was nine, in 2008.
Hayes, a meteorologist since 1970, said he has never seen a year
for extreme weather like this, calling it "the deadly, destructive
and relentless 2011."
And this year's total may not stop at 12. Officials are still
adding up the damage from the Tropical Storm Lee and the
pre-Halloween Northeast snowstorm, and so far each is at $750
million. And there's still nearly a month left in the year.
Scientists blame an unlucky combination of global warming and
freak chance. They say even with the long-predicted increase in
weather extremes triggered by manmade climate change, 2011 in the
U.S. was wilder than they predicted. For example, the six large
outbreaks of twisters can't be attributed to global warming,
scientists say.
"The degree of devastation is extreme in and of itself, and it
would be tempting to say it's a sign of things to come, though we
would be hard-pressed to see such a convergence of circumstances
occurring in one single year again for a while," said Jerry Meehl,
a climate scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric
Research in Boulder, Colo.
Another factor in the rising number of billion-dollar calamities:
"More people and more stuff in harm's way," such as in coastal
areas, said NOAA Administrator Jane Lubchenco.
"What we're seeing this year is not just an anomalous year, but a
harbinger of things to come," with heat waves, droughts and other
extreme weather, Lubchenco said Wednesday at an American
Geophysical Union science conference in San Francisco.
The number of weather catastrophes that pass the billion-dollar
mark when adjusted into constant dollars is increasing with each
decade. In the 1980s, the country averaged slightly more than one
a year. In the 1990s, it was 3.8 a year. It jumped to 4.6 in the
first decade of this century. And in the past two years, it has
averaged 7.5.
Other years had higher overall damage figures because of one
gargantuan disaster, such as Hurricane Katrina in 2005 and a 1988
drought.
But this isn't just about numbers.
"Each of these events is a huge disaster for victims who
experience them," Lubchenco said in an email. "They are an
unprecedented challenge for the nation."
Half the billion-dollar disasters were tornado outbreaks in one of
the deadliest years on record. More than 540 people were killed in
those six tragedies. In four days in April, there were 343
tornadoes in the largest outbreak on record, including 199 in one
day, which is another record.
Texas had more than a million acres burned by wildfire, a record
for the state, and Oklahoma set a record for the hottest month
ever in the U.S. The Ohio Valley had triple the normal rainfall,
which caused major flooding along the Mississippi River.
"Too little water in the South, too much water in the North," said
Andrew Weaver, a climate scientist at the University of Victoria
in Canada. "It's a story we are hearing more and more often."
That's why the world has to do two things, said Princeton
University geological sciences professor Michael Oppenheimer: try
to slow global warming by reducing greenhouse gas emissions and
prepare better for extreme weather.