Nature
2024.07.12 18:54 GMT+8

U.S. loses billions to climate disasters in first half of 2024

Updated 2024.07.12 18:54 GMT+8
CGTN

The United States was hit by 15 climate disasters in the first half of this year, each with losses exceeding $1 billion, according to the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA).

The nation's premier meteorological agency said in a report released earlier this week that the disasters consisted of 13 severe storm events and two winter storms.

A tow truck operator prepares to place a damaged car on a flatbed after the vehicle was damaged in an accident caused by wet and heavy snow in a winter storm in Denver, Colorado, the U.S., February 3, 2024. /CFP

Winter storms swept through the U.S. Midwest and around the Great Lakes in January. Nearly 30 million people, mainly in the Midwest and around the Great Lakes, were under a winter storm warning early on January 12.

On that day, wind-whipped snow hit the Chicago area, leaving thousands without power and leading to nearly a thousand flight and train cancellations. According to ComEd's outage map, 2,268 power outages were reported across the city, affecting more than 96,000 customers.

Powerful storms slammed the U.S. West Coast in February. On February 3, a severe storm system struck California, resulting in at least three fatalities, nearly 140,000 people without power and millions under flood alerts for at least three days. The storm unleashed mudslides, flooded roadways and triggered widespread power outages.

On February 20, a storm hit California again, bringing heavy rain, snow and wind, leading to devastating impacts, including destructive mudslides and floods.

Crews work to clean up debris after a wall came down in the aftermath of a severe storm in Houston, Texas, the U.S., May 17, 2024. /CFP

Severe storms battered the U.S. South in April, stretching from Texas to Florida. During a storm on April 11, one person was killed, more than 10 others were injured, more than 100 homes and buildings were damaged, and hundreds of thousands of people were left without power across the area.

In May, storms hit Iowa, Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Kentucky, killing more than 20 people and leaving many injured or displaced in the aftermath.

According to the Harris County Sheriff's Office, the destructive storms battering Houston, the country's fourth-largest city, on the night of May 16 killed at least seven people, including a mother of four who was driving in her vehicle but crushed by fallen trees.

Over the Memorial Day weekend in May, at least 20 people were killed after storms hit the U.S. states of Texas, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Kentucky. It was the deadliest tornado in Texas since 2015.

People walk around Rotary Park looking at downed trees after a tornado swept through the area in Livonia, Michigan, the U.S., June 5, 2024. /CFP

A tornado ripped through suburban Detroit in early June. The tornado hit Michigan without warning, killing a toddler on June 6, while storms in Ohio and Maryland injured at least 13.

The quick-developing tornado struck several neighborhoods in the Detroit suburb of Livonia on June 5, according to the city's website. The National Weather Service in Detroit confirmed on the social media platform X that it was an EF1 tornado with a peak wind speed of 153 kilometers per hour that moved through Livonia. The agency said the twister traveled over 8 kilometers per hour, uprooting trees and damaging homes.

The United States has sustained 391 weather and climate disasters since 1980, each causing damage worth at least $1 billion. According to NOAA data, the total cost tops $2.7 trillion.

Damage averaged roughly $8.5 billion annually from 1980 to 2023, with the average surging over the last five years to $20.4 billion.

(Cover: Waves crash over a breakwater in Alameda, California, with the San Francisco skyline in the background, February 4, 2024. /CFP)

Source(s): Xinhua News Agency
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