The Capital

Climate calamities were nonstop

Nature’s wrath refused to relent around the world

- By Seth Borenstein

Nature struck relentless­ly in 2020 with record-breaking and deadly weather- and climate-related disasters.

With the most named storms in the Atlantic, the largest-ever area of California burned by wildfires, killer floods in Asia and Africa, and a hot, melting Arctic, 2020 was more than a disastrous year with the pandemic. It was a year of disasters — and climate change from the burning of coal, oil and natural gas was a big factor, scientists said.

The United States didn’t just set a record for the most disasters costing at least $1 billion — adjusted for inflation — the nation obliterate­d the record, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion.

By September, 2020 had tied the old record of 16 billion-dollar disasters and when the count is completed in early January, officials figure it will be at least 20. Only Alaska, Hawaii and North Dakota weren’t part of a billion-dollar weather disaster, and all the coastline from Texas to Maine, except for a tiny part of Florida, was under a watch or warning for a hurricane, tropical storm or storm surge from those systems in 2020, according to U.S. weather officials.

With 30 named storms, the Atlantic hurricane season surpassed the mark set in 2005, ran out of storm names and went deep into the Greek alphabet, making meteorolog­ists reconsider how they name future storms, officials said. Ten of those storms rapidly intensifie­d, making them more dangerous. A dozen made landfall in the U.S., easily smashing the old record of nine. And Louisiana got hit five times. At one point, the American Red Cross had 60 New Orleans hotels filled with refugees.

With a devastatin­g 20-year megadrough­t and near-record heat, California had at least 6,528 square miles burned by wildfire, doubling the previous record area burned. Five of the six largest wildfires in California history have been in 2020. Oregon and Colorado had immense fire damage too. More than 10,000 buildings were damaged or destroyed and at least 41 people killed.

Between fires and hurricanes, the Red Cross provided a record 1.3 million nights of shelter for disaster-struck Americans — four times the annual average for the previous decade.

“Since April, we’ve seen a large disaster occur somewhere in the country every five days,” said Trevor Riggen, the Red Cross vice president in charge of disasters. “It’s really been a nonstop pace, and not all those disasters make the news.”

It was such a busy and crazy a year that a derecho that savaged the Midwest somehow flew under the radar, despite damage nearing $10 billion. Other billion-dollar severe storms, often with tornadoes and hail, struck the U.S. in January, February, twice in March, three times in April and another three times in May.

All these U.S. disasters have “really added up to create a catastroph­ic year,” said Adam Smith, a NOAA applied climatolog­ist. “Climate change has its fingerprin­ts on many of these different extremes and disasters.”

“Nature is sending us a

NOAH BERGER/AP message. We better hear it,” United Nations Environmen­t Program Director Inger Andersen said. “Wherever you go, whatever continent, we see nature socking it at us. The warmest three-year period we’ve ever seen. The Arctic temperatur­es, the wildfires, etc., etc.”

Worldwide, more than 220 climate- and weather-related disasters hurt more than 70 million people and caused more than $69 billion in damage. Over 7,500 people were killed, according to preliminar­y figures from the internatio­nal disaster database kept at the Center for Research on the Epidemiolo­gy of Disasters at the Catholic University of Louvain in Belgium.

Of the disasters the group tracks, including earthquake­s, volcanoes and landslides, 85% to 90% are climate- and weather-related, said Director Debarati Guha-Sapir.

Unlike the United States, which saw a rare break in 2020 from increasing nonhurrica­ne flooding, worldwide “floods is your biggest problem,” Guha-Sapir said. “It’s a huge mistake to underestim­ate floods.”

Floods killed more than 1,900 people in India in June and affected 17 million people, according to the center’s data. Other flooding and associated landslides in Nepal, Pakistan, Afghanista­n and again in India killed at least another 1,250 people. African floods killed nearly 600 people. And flooding along the Yangtze River and the Three Gorges Dam in China killed at least 279 people in the summer and caused economic losses of more than $15 billion, according to the World Meteorolog­ical Organizati­on.

Hue, Vietnam, had a record 103 inches of rain in October, according to the WMO.

Extremes, including heat waves and droughts, hit all over the world. Siberia reached a record 100 degrees as much of the Arctic was 9 degrees warmer than average and had an exceptiona­lly bad wildfire season. Arctic sea ice shrank to the second lowest level on record and set a few monthly records for melt.

Death Valley saw the warmest temperatur­e recorded —129.9 degrees — on Earth in at least 80 years.

The pace of disasters is noticeably increasing, said disaster experts and climate scientists. The internatio­nal database in Belgium calculated that from 1980 to 1999, the world had 4,212 disasters affecting 3.25 billion people and costing $1.63 trillion, adjusted for inflation. From 2000 to 2019, those figures jumped to 7,348 disasters, 4.03 billion people affected and $2.97 trillion in damage.

“Disasters are very much becoming a chronic condition in this country,” said Riggen, who has noticed the change since 2006 when he joined the Red Cross after Hurricane Katrina.

Climate change figures in the growth of disasters, especially wildfires worsened by drought and heat, said Pennsylvan­ia State University climate scientist Michael Mann.

“I didn’t expect to see a season with 30 named storms in my lifetime,” Mann said, noting that hurricanes were fueled by a natural La Nina cooling of parts of the central Pacific combined with humancause­d warming of water temperatur­es.

National Hurricane Center Deputy Director Ed Rappaport said: “It was an exhausting year.”

 ??  ?? In a year marked by climate-related disasters worldwide, five of the six largest wildfires in California’s history happened in 2020. Above, people watch as flames approach a home Aug. 21 in incorporat­ed Napa County.
In a year marked by climate-related disasters worldwide, five of the six largest wildfires in California’s history happened in 2020. Above, people watch as flames approach a home Aug. 21 in incorporat­ed Napa County.

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