The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Climate change poses risk to U.S. housing values

Across nation, properties in vulnerable areas overvalued by $121B to $237B

- By Brady Dennis Washington Post

The nation’s real estate market has yet to fully account for the increasing threats to millions of homes from rising seas, stronger storms and torrential downpours, according to new research published Thursday. “Climate change is happening, and there’s a tremendous amount of unknown risk around the country,” said Jeremy Porter, a co-author of the study in Nature Climate Change and a professor of quantitati­ve methods at the City University of New York. “These things are going to come to a head.”

The combinatio­n of federal flood maps that don’t reflect the true scope of risk in a warming world, government insurance policies that subsidize developmen­t in flood-prone areas and buyers who haven’t accepted the dangers posed by climate change all contribute to the prospect of a future real estate bubble, researcher­s found.

They estimate that across the United States, properties in vulnerable areas are overvalued by $121 billion to $237 billion, and that if those unacknowle­dged risks are realized, low-income homeowners in particular stand to lose significan­t amounts of equity.

“As we’ve seen in California the last few weeks, these aren’t hypothetic­als, and the risk is more extensive than expected — and that risks carries an enormous cost,” said Jesse Gourevitch, a lead author of the study.

But individual homeowners won’t be the only ones facing the financial fallout.

Thursday’s study, which includes researcher­s from the nonprofit First Street Foundation, the Environmen­tal Defense Fund and the Federal Reserve, also details how municipal government­s that rely heavily on property taxes could face huge budget shortfalls as flood-prone homes lose value or become uninhabita­ble.

“It could mean less revenue for infrastruc­ture, for schools, for social services,” Porter said. “It actually impacts the entire community.”

According to the study, a significan­t portion of overvalued properties are concentrat­ed in communitie­s along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts that have heightened exposure to hurricanes and rising seas, lax flood-disclosure laws and a high proportion of residents who do not view climate change as an imminent threat. Properties in Florida are overvalued by $50 billion based on their actual flood exposure, according to the researcher­s’ calculatio­ns.

But elsewhere in the country, the true risks also don’t match the current reality.

For instance, areas of New England and Appalachia — both places that face more and more flooding driven by extreme precipitat­ion — also stand to lose significan­t value in the coming decades, the study found.

“It definitely corroborat­es a lot of what we already see happening, and a lot of other research that’s been done in this arena,” said Rob Moore, a senior policy analyst for the Natural Resources Defense Council, who was not involved in Thursday’s study. “We have to start being honest with people about the risks they face.”

Moore said a majority of states have “inadequate or no requiremen­t” to disclose flood risks to buyers or renters. In addition, federal flood maps are often out of date, and even where they are current, they don’t account for future sea level rise or flooding that results from extreme rainfall events or many inland waterways.

To generate their assessment, researcher­s behind Thursday’s study compared the extent to which properties already account for the costs of flooding to detailed models that estimate the damage that climate-fueled disasters are likely to inflict over the next 30 years.

Benjamin Keys, a professor of real estate and finance at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Wharton School who has studied the effects of sea level rise on housing markets, said the results are compelling — and if anything, probably conservati­ve.

“For a very long time, the costs of living on the coast have not reflected the true risks,” Keys said, but “the riskiness of coastal flooding is accelerati­ng.”

Thursday’s findings are in line with a growing body of evidence that suggests the danger posed by climate change in coming years has not yet fully been reflected in the U.S. housing market.

A 2020 analysis by the First Street Foundation, which provides flood-risk informatio­n on individual homes around the country, found that millions of homeowners will probably be stuck with properties that are literally and financiall­y underwater, and that insurers and lenders could eventually face a financial reckoning of their own.

The firm says that 14.6 million properties currently face a substantia­l level of flood risk — at least a 1 percent annual probabilit­y of flooding. But that number will swell to more than 16 million by 2050, data shows, and the increasing frequency and severity of flooding will also cause average annual losses to climb.

Meanwhile, a Washington Post analysis of extreme flooding events around the country between June and September last year underscore­d how homeowners, prospectiv­e buyers, renters and even local officials are often in the dark about the potential dangers they face, which insurance they should buy and what kinds of developmen­t should be restricted.

The examinatio­n documented impacts in communitie­s throughout the country where FEMA’S maps do not adequately warn Americans about flood risk, and how as climate change accelerate­s, it fuels types of flooding that such maps aren’t designed to capture.

A 2022 analysis by the research nonprofit Climate Central separately detailed how hundreds of thousands of homes, offices and other privately owned properties are likely to slip below swelling tide lines over the next few decades.

The groups found that nearly 650,000 individual, privately owned parcels, across as many as 4.4 million acres of land, are projected to fall below changing tidal boundaries by 2050. Much of that is in coastal states such as Louisiana, Florida and North Carolina. But at the same time, states such as New Jersey, New York and Maryland also stand to see thousands of properties fall below tidelines in coming decades.

That analysis also highlighte­d how the projected inundation of so many homes, while tragic for individual owners, promises to erode the revenue that many local government­s need to operate. Likewise, Thursday’s study found that while a large number of such municipali­ties are concentrat­ed in coastal counties, there are others in inland areas of eastern Tennessee, Central Texas, Wisconsin, Idaho and Montana that also are highly vulnerable as flooding increases.

“This is a problem for cities and towns who could struggle financiall­y if property values — and therefore property taxes — take a dive,” Penny Liao, a fellow at Resources for the Future and co-author of the Nature study, said in a statement. “We need to think about flood risk not as a homeowner’s problem, but as a problem for our entire community, city and housing market.”

The authors behind Thursday’s study make clear that the timing and extent to which properties lose value will depend on the decisions that policymake­rs, regulators, mortgage lenders, insurers and individual homeowners make in the years ahead.

Already, the federal government has taken steps to more accurately price flood insurance policies based on actual risk. Even as people continue to flock to coastal communitie­s, in certain flood-prone areas, property values have begun to rise more slowly. And this week, the North Carolina Real Estate Commission agreed to craft rules that would require home sellers to provide more historical flood informatio­n to potential buyers.

“There is a clear need for improving flood risk communicat­ion via updated flood maps, broadening flood risk disclosure laws at the state and federal level and increasing investment in flood risk reduction,” Gourevitch said.

“And as we decide how to adapt to these risks, decision-makers will have to grapple with the moral question about who bears the cost.”

 ?? LUIS SINCO/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? Homes line the banks of the Colorado River in Bullhead City, Arizona, in May 2022. Rising seas and lax flood-disclosure laws have not been fully accounted for by the nation’s real estate markets.
LUIS SINCO/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS Homes line the banks of the Colorado River in Bullhead City, Arizona, in May 2022. Rising seas and lax flood-disclosure laws have not been fully accounted for by the nation’s real estate markets.
 ?? LIPO CHING/TNS 2018 ?? Aerial footage shows homes destroyed by the Camp fire near the Paradise Plaza off Clark Road in Paradise, California, on Nov. 15, 2018. The estimated damage climate-fueled disasters are likely to inflict over the next 30 years is very high.
LIPO CHING/TNS 2018 Aerial footage shows homes destroyed by the Camp fire near the Paradise Plaza off Clark Road in Paradise, California, on Nov. 15, 2018. The estimated damage climate-fueled disasters are likely to inflict over the next 30 years is very high.
 ?? EVA MARIE UZCATEGUI/BLOOMBERG ?? A resident walks home in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian in Fort Myers, Fla., in 2022. A study details how municipali­ties that rely heavily on property taxes could face huge budget shortfalls as flood-prone homes lose value or become uninhabita­ble.
EVA MARIE UZCATEGUI/BLOOMBERG A resident walks home in the aftermath of Hurricane Ian in Fort Myers, Fla., in 2022. A study details how municipali­ties that rely heavily on property taxes could face huge budget shortfalls as flood-prone homes lose value or become uninhabita­ble.

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