Storms destroy more because there’s more to destroy
posted at 10:34 am on June 21, 2006 by Bryan
In 1947, before tropical storms were named, a major hurricane struck Florida, the most hurricane-exposed state. The 1947 storm brought peak winds of 155 miles per hour and caused the Sunshine State an estimated $775 million in damage. At the time, Florida had about 600,000 detached single-family homes worth roughly $20 billion. In August 1992, Hurricane Andrew hit Florida with peak gusts of 164 mph, causing an estimated $37 billion in damages. By the time Andrew arrived, Florida possessed about 3 million single-family detached homes worth roughly $500 billion. Housing-stock value was way up, and so losses were way up. And this is a simplified calculation taking into account only single-family detached homes—the value of office buildings, industry, apartments, infrastructure, and amusement parks was also much higher in Florida in 1992 than in 1947. Andrew did roughly 50 times the monetary damage to Florida as did the similar hurricane of 1947. And it’s a fair guess that in 1992, Florida was 50 times more valuable than in 1947.
The case for man-made global warming is weaker than Easterbrook suggests at the end, and the link between global warming and hurricane strength has been deflated by meteorologist Joe Bastardi and the other top minds in the field like National Hurricane Center Director Max Mayfield. So there’s that.
And there’s common sense: We build more expensive stuff near our coasts, and then we’re shocked! Shocked! when hurricanes destroy more stuff. We consign levee maintenance to corrupt local crony-infested boards and then we’re shocked! Shocked! when levees don’t perform up to the standards that were being undercut for decades.










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If you build on the coast, you must accept the high risk that a storm will blow it away. Although I don’t live directly on the beach, i do live in a coastal Texas city, and I am NOT here by choice (we were transferred). I have to shoulder the very high windstorm insurance rates and coastal flooding insurance rates(the storms in Fla. have made our insurance go up even though my city hasn’t seen a direct hit since the 1970′s.) To make matters worse, if you are one of the lucky ones to have a beach house and a storm blows in and the vegetation line is moved back exposing your beach house to the sand, you lose your land and your house. This is Texas law.
It’s a risky proposition. In my humble opinion, if someone wants to build a beach house, fine. But don’t expect the federal government to bail you out should you lose your million dollar investment.
pullingmyhairout on June 21, 2006 at 10:52 AM
No – storms destroy more property in 2005-06 because of George W. Bush.
Didn’t you get the memo?
Professor Blather on June 21, 2006 at 10:55 AM
Haven’t you been watching the “Algore Doomsday Counter” over at Rush’s site? We only have 9 years 221 days 14 hours 50 mins until global warming destroys us all!!!
Now, if only there was a way I could get ol’ Al to hold his breath while he waits.
Cary on June 21, 2006 at 11:09 AM
oh Blather,
You make my day. :)
pullingmyhairout on June 21, 2006 at 11:15 AM
;)
What? We’ve still got nine years?
Awesome. What’s the big fuss then?
Professor Blather on June 21, 2006 at 11:19 AM
And how about those, in the State Stuck on Stupid, who persist in living in a bowl??? Oh no, cher, we can’t worry ‘bout dat and dose FEMA trailers are so damn cute.
Aunt B on June 21, 2006 at 11:23 AM
Out here in VA people loose houses to Hurricanes and flooding every few years. They are then subsidized by the government to rebuild.
Doesn’t make a lot of sense to me. If my house was damaged/destroyed every 3-5 years I would have to move.
Wyrd on June 21, 2006 at 11:44 AM
Well of course. If you live in a place prone to floods, you will probably get flooded. If you live in a tornado alley, you will probably be in one. If you live in California, you will experience some earth tremors. There is no 100 percent safe place on earth, and electing Algore is not going to make it so.
Ellen on June 21, 2006 at 12:14 PM
Alrighty then. I bet this fella can tell us who’s buried in Grant’s tomb.
honora on June 21, 2006 at 12:29 PM
Yes, I can. But I’m not telling you.
Bryan on June 21, 2006 at 12:48 PM
pullingmyhairout “Don’t expect the federal government to bail you out!”
My friend We, you and me, are the one’s who pay to bail all these people out.
I once saw a news reporter talking to a man who was watching his house slide down the side of a mountain in CA for the 3rd time.
The reported asked him, “Why do you keep re-building. He replied, “Are you kidding? Where else can you get a view like this?”
The YOU who keeps rebuilding this Dude house are you and me!
Dread Pirate Roberts VI on June 21, 2006 at 12:48 PM
Hurricanes are just doing the jobs terrorists can’t do.
BirdEye on June 21, 2006 at 12:52 PM
Nobody’s buried in it, it’s a mausoleum. Above ground. Ha! You didn’t know that did you?
ScottG on June 21, 2006 at 12:53 PM
.
DOH!!!! (That’s supposed to be Homer Simpson’s signature exclamation!)
honora on June 21, 2006 at 12:55 PM
Nobody’s buried in it, it’s a mausoleum. Above ground. Ha! You didn’t know that did you?
ScottG on June 21, 2006 at 12:53 PM
Nobody’s buried in it, it’s a mausoleum. Above ground. Ha! You didn’t know that did you?
ScottG on June 21, 2006 at 12:53 PM
It’s a joke: back in the 50′s or 60′s, this was a question on a game show; thinking it was a trick question, the contestant gave a wrong answer, and the question became shorthand for belaboring the obvious. (It comes down to a question of what “in” means….)
The curse of getting old is remembering far too much useless information….
honora on June 21, 2006 at 1:06 PM
Dread,
Yes, i realize WE are the ones paying for it. question is, how do we make that stop? do you really think that our illustrious congress-people (he he he) are going to actually pass a law that helps taxpayers?? highly doubt it, considering that they can’t even figure out a way to seal the border…remember – these are the same guys who build bridges to nowhere. I have zero confidence.
pullingmyhairout on June 21, 2006 at 1:13 PM
Um, folks… Hurricane’s didn’t exist before Bush/Cheney. Neither did New Orleans’ crime rate or crappy levees. Nor did global warming.
Hoodlumman on June 21, 2006 at 1:24 PM
Everything negative that happens is the fault of President Bush.
When Hurricane Katrina was approaching the coasts in the Gulf, I don’t know why “the smartest woman in the world” didn’t go stand on the shoreline and command that the hurricane retreat….or at the very least blow the hurricane away with her own “hot air”.
Here in Florida, it’s so very hot I think I saw the devil himself run for cover in the shade.
doingwhatican on June 21, 2006 at 1:53 PM
There are simply too many people in the US these days and waterfront property is getting more expensive because of overcrowding near the coast. Thank God the congress will not let 15 million illegals stay here and breed us all out of standing room. But wait…..if we’re out of standing room, we won’t worry about real estate costs. Could that be the Dems plan?
Shmo on June 21, 2006 at 3:54 PM
Honora,
About Grant’s Tomb…I know it’s a joke too.
ScottG on June 21, 2006 at 4:16 PM
John Stossel did a bit on rebuilding in the flood plains a few years back. It was actually pretty funny … because he used himself as a prime example.
He owned a home on the beach (in the Carolinas maybe?) and some government program or other guaranteed public funds if his house was wiped out. He interviewed people who really had built and rebuilt the same house two or three times, never spending a penny of private money.
Professor Blather on June 21, 2006 at 4:53 PM
If you live in a place prone to floods, you will probably get flooded. If you live in a tornado alley, you will probably be in one. If you live in California, you will experience some earth tremors. There is no 100 percent safe place on earth
Ain’t that the truth. As populations increase and cities/towns expand with less and less open spaces, there are greater chances that a population center will be involved in a major storm. Additionally, modern residential construction cannot withstand major wind, water or tremors.
docdave on June 21, 2006 at 5:23 PM