Houston Chronicle Sunday

Cost of climate change fuels growing sector of U.S. economy

- By Tim Quinson

The cost of the climate crisis keeps going up.

In terms of damage to the atmosphere and life on Earth, this may seem obvious.

But the overall price tag of global warming has long been the subject of debate.

Now, new data from Bloomberg Intelligen­ce has put a number to the cost of burning fossil fuels. It’s averaged about $500 billion a year since 2016.

That’s equal to about 2% of U.S. gross domestic product, according to Bloomberg Intelligen­ce senior ESG climate analyst Andrew John Stevenson.

Those figures represent the combined expenses from property damages, power outages, government spending and constructi­on-surge inflation at the state level, he says.

For broader context, the estimated financial damages related to global warming have totaled almost $7 trillion over the past 30 years, Stevenson says.

And this tally excludes things like lost wages tied to wildfires or extreme heat, as well as rising property-insurance premiums.

While certainly a sober reminder of the destructio­n wreaked by humanity, Stevenson notes there’s another way to look at the financial impact of the climate crisis.

“Climate-related spending has made up 32% of GDP growth since 2016,” he says.

Climate events are “a growing, visible part of the U.S.

economy, creating tailwinds for a few companies.”

Stevenson acknowledg­es, of course, that such disasters create “headwinds for the overwhelmi­ng majority of individual­s, companies and the government.”

Stevenson has introduced what he calls the BI Climate Damages Tracker, to help investors calculate the economic impact — in either direction — of severe weather.

Everything from the emergence of new businesses and changes in household spending to consumer credit and insurance risks.

The tracker is updated monthly with government and insurance data to estimate how the climate crisis is affecting public and private sector spending.

Investors have been diverting more funds to companies such as Aon Plc, Quanta Services Inc. and Home Depot Inc. because they’re among those that help businesses and homeowners clean up after the last storm and prepare for the next one, Stevenson says.

The analyst tracks storms that cause damages of less than $10 billion, as well as those that cost more than $10 billion.

It’s the smaller events that have historical­ly forced insurers to retain more losses on their balance sheets, Stevenson says.

The three states that have traditiona­lly been hit the hardest in that regard are Texas, Florida and Louisiana.

Fallout from climate events tends to be highly inflationa­ry at both the local and national levels, as goods and services are diverted to meet the immediate needs of affected areas, Stevenson says.

The BI Repair Sector includes 37 companies that are focused on storage, rentals, waste removal, building products, materials and constructi­on and heating, ventilatio­n and air conditioni­ng (HVAC) services.

The average stock in the group, which includes Home Depot and Waste Management Inc., outperform­ed an equalweigh­ted S&P 500 by 96% on “a total-return, beta-neutral basis” over the past 10 years, Stevenson says.

For example, shares of Advanced Drainage Systems Inc. almost quadrupled since the first half of 2020 at the same time the company’s revenue almost doubled, partly due to the rising amount of flooding near rivers and coastal cities.

Advanced Drainage makes storm-water management and drainage systems.

And then there’s the BI Prepare Sector, which includes 40 companies involved in mitigating risks related to supplychai­n disruption, heat stress, wildfire pollution and infrastruc­ture planning.

This group, which includes Aon, MSA Safety Inc. and Dycom Industries Inc., exceeded the equal-weighted S&P 500 by 107% in the same 10-year period, according to the analyst’s calculatio­ns.

Dycom is a standout, Stevenson says. The company provides engineerin­g, design and planning services to ensure that critical infrastruc­ture can perform under all conditions.

Other surprising beneficiar­ies of a warming planet are “installmen­t” lenders like

World Acceptance Corp. and FirstCash Holdings Inc., Stevenson says.

Climate events cause significan­t short-term, high-cost spending that aren’t included in the budgets of most Americans.

The result is people turn to “alternativ­e lenders” to avoid larger future bills, he says. “After all, the money has to come from somewhere.”

 ?? Giorgio Viera/Getty Images file photo ?? Destroyed boats on San Carlos Island in Fort Myers Beach, Fla., sit atop each other after Hurricane Ian in November 2022.
Giorgio Viera/Getty Images file photo Destroyed boats on San Carlos Island in Fort Myers Beach, Fla., sit atop each other after Hurricane Ian in November 2022.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States