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Besides being darned good
forecasters, the good people at the National
Hurricane Center
are also paragons of social sensitivity. They give storms names reflective of
the cultures through which they are likely to pass. Hurricanes in the Atlantic
basin are given anglicized names or ones that are roughly similar in both
English and Spanish: Alberto, Bob, Gloria. In the Eastern Pacific, where storms
frequently hit western Mexico,
almost all the names are pure Spanish.
In this vein, I'd like to vote that this year's "H" storm in the Atlantic be given the name Hysteria. As in,
caused-by-global-warming-hysteria. As in, the perception that there's been a
tremendous increase in the damage done by
these storms caused by global warming.
The name should be "Hysteria," because that's simply, flatly, untrue.
Last month, Roger Pielke, Jr., director of the Center for Science and
Technology Policy Research at the University
of Colorado, released the
most comprehensive paper ever published on the subject of damage trends in
Atlantic hurricanes. The article will appear soon in the peer-reviewed journal Natural
Hazards Review.
Is the planet warmer than it was? Yes. Is there any trend in hurricane-related
damages in the United States,
where good records of damages exist? After accounting simultaneously for
inflation, population, and property values, no.
The problem with these storms is that Americans have a peculiar proclivity to
take money and bury it in a sand dune on a hurricane-prone beach, i.e. a beach
house. As a result, the number of beach homes is going up and up, and because
the supply is limited (there's only so much beach), prices have risen
astronomically. And the costs and sizes of the homes have also risen, given
that increases in real wealth have outpaced inflation.
Pielke's very clever (and elegant) methodology, employing a simple algebraic
equation, gives hurricane damages in 2005-dollar equivalents. That year's
Katrina, a monster by any standard, caused $81 billion worth of damage. Applied
Insurance Research, using a totally different method, estimated $82 billion.
But Katrina pales in comparison to the Great Miami hurricane of 1926. Pielke
gives two estimates, averaging around $148 billion. AIR pegs it at $160
billion. Given the trajectory of property values and population in Florida, Pielke notes
that a $500 billion hurricane (in today's dollars) should be quite likely by
the 2020s.
A little history. After the Great Miami and Katrina, the remaining top ten
storms (in descending order) occurred in 1900 (Galveston
1), 1915 (Galveston 2), 1992 (Andrew), 1983 (New
England), 1944 (unnamed), 1928 (Lake Okeechobee
4), 1960 (Donna/Florida), and 1969 (Camille/Mississippi). There is no obvious
bias toward recent years. In fact, the combination of the 1926 and 1928
hurricanes places the damages in 1926-35 nearly 15% higher than 1996-2005, the
last decade Pielke studied.
What's more interesting are the trends. After allowing only for inflation,
hurricane damages are indeed increasing. Rather, it's the other factors -- the
huge coastal population increases and the rapidly appreciating property values
-- that negate any trends.
The silence associated with this important finding is deafening, and the
results are consistent with other science that is being ignored in the current
climate. One of Pielke's co-authors, Chris Landsea, from the National Hurricane
Center, has also found no trends in hurricane frequency or intensity when they
strike the U.S. Sure, as is known to anyone who has studied hurricane data,
there has been an increase in the number of strong storms in the past decade,
but there were also a similar number of major hurricanes in the 1940s and
1950s, long before such activity could be attributed to global warming.
As Pielke writes, "The lack of trend in twentieth century normalized
[inflation and wealth-adjusted] hurricane losses is consistent with what one
would expect to find given the lack of trends in hurricane frequency or
intensity at landfall."
Hysteria begets cost, especially when politics gets involved. For years now,
Europe's big reinsurance companies -- the people who insure the insurers -- has
been raising rates, claiming that global warming is making hurricane damages
worse. Interestingly, the American companies, using the AIR data, are not as
strident.
This works out to an interesting market competition. People will obviously tend
towards the lower cost insurance, after adjusting for coverage differences.
Someone is going to go out of business. Who will win here: Hurricane Hysteria,
or the real world?
Patrick J. Michaels is senior fellow in environmental studies at the Cato Institute and author of Meltdown:
The Predictable Distortion of Global Warming by Scientists, Politicians, and
the Media.
http://www.spectator.org/dsp_article.asp?art_id=11752
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