Natural Calamities: Hurricanes

  POST AUTHOR- TYDS Siddhesh Verlekar

Women look at destruction after Hurricane struck zimbale 

Hurricane season officially began June 1, and we can expect a  busy season of damaging storms in the Atlantic, according to the  National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s outlook. 

Hurricanes are the leading cause of natural disasters in the  Caribbean, making the region one of the most vulnerable in the  world. Yet, only 62 percent of disasters caused by hurricanes  have recorded data on economic damages, as the information is  difficult to collect. 

Wind damage 

This chart, from a recent paper, looks at the relationship  between maximum wind speeds and the damages  hurricanes cause. The goal is to estimate the missing data 

for the Caribbean, and to calculate the potential costs that  climate change would have in the region. It finds that  damages in percent of GDP increase by about 3 percent  with an increase in wind speed of 1 percent. 

The new data set shows that hurricane damages are considerably  underreported, particularly in the 1950s and 1960s, with average  damages potentially being three times as large as the reported  average of 1.6 percent of GDP per year. 

Hurricanes that do not make landfall also leave a trail of damage  in the Caribbean economies.

Climate change is expected to increase the intensity of  hurricanes, as warmer sea surface temperatures will create the  right environment for large storms to form and strengthen. The  data shows average annual hurricane damages in the Caribbean  will increase between 22 and 77 percent by the year 2100, in a  global warming scenario of high CO2 concentrations and high  global temperatures.


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