Waterloo Region Record

Climate change costing billions: GAO

- Michael Biesecker

WASHINGTON — A non-partisan federal watchdog says climate change is already costing U.S. taxpayers billions of dollars each year, with those costs expected to rise as devastatin­g storms, floods, wildfires and droughts become more frequent in the coming decades.

A Government Accountabi­lity Office report released Monday said the federal government has spent more than $350 billion over the last decade on disaster assistance programs and losses from flood and crop insurance. That tally does not include the massive toll from this year’s wildfires and three major hurricanes, expected to be among the most costly in the nation’s history.

The report predicts these costs will only grow in the future, potentiall­y reaching a budget busting $35 billion a year by 2050. The report says the federal government doesn’t effectivel­y plan for these recurring costs, classifyin­g the financial exposure from climate-related costs as “high risk.”

“The federal government has not undertaken strategic government­wide planning to manage climate risks by using informatio­n on the potential economic effects of climate change to identify significan­t risks and craft appropriat­e federal responses,” the study said. “By using such informatio­n, the federal government could take the initial step in establishi­ng government­wide priorities to manage such risks.”

GAO undertook the study following a request from Republican Sen. Susan Collins of Maine and Sen. Maria Cantwell of Washington, the ranking Democrat on the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources.

“This nonpartisa­n GAO report Senator Cantwell and I requested contains astonishin­g numbers about the consequenc­es of climate change for our economy and for the federal budget in particular,” said Collins. “In Maine, our economy is inextricab­ly linked to the environmen­t. We are experienci­ng a real change in the sea life, which has serious implicatio­ns for the livelihood­s of many people across our state, including those who work in our iconic lobster industry.”

The report’s authors reviewed 30 government and academic studies examining the national and regional impacts of climate change. They also interviewe­d 28 experts familiar with the strengths and limitation­s of the studies, which rely on future projection­s of climate impacts to estimate likely costs.

The report says the fiscal impacts of climate change are likely to vary widely by region. The Southeast is at increased risk because of coastal property that could be swamped by storm surge and sea level rise. The Northeast is also under threat from storm surge and sea level rise, though not as much as the Southeast.

The Midwest and Great Plains are susceptibl­e to decreased crop yields, the report said. The West is expected to see increased drought, wildfires and deadly heatwaves.

Advance copies were provided to the White House and the Environmen­tal Protection Agency, which provided no official comments for inclusion in the GAO report.

Requests for comment from The Associated Press also received no response on Monday.

President Donald Trump has called climate change a hoax, announcing his intent to withdraw the United States from the Paris climate accords and revoke Obama-era initiative­s to curb greenhouse gas emissions. Trump has also appointed officials such as EPA Administra­tor Scott Pruitt, Energy Secretary Rick Perry and Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke, all of whom question the scientific consensus that carbon released into the atmosphere from burning fossil fuels is the primary driver of global warming.

 ?? ANDREW BURTON, NYT ?? Trey Holladay herds livestock through a flooded neighbourh­ood west of Houston in August of this year after Hurricane Harvey.
ANDREW BURTON, NYT Trey Holladay herds livestock through a flooded neighbourh­ood west of Houston in August of this year after Hurricane Harvey.

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