What Hurricane Harvey Says About Risk, Climate, and Resilience

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Byย Andrew Dessler, Texas A&M University,ย Daniel Cohan, Rice University, and Katharine Hayhoe, Texas Techย University

Hurricane Harvey has taught us many lessons, but the most valuable may be the oldest lesson of all, one we humans have been learning โ€” and forgetting โ€” since the dawn of time: how much we all have to lose when climate and weather disastersย strike.

The risks we face from disasters depend on three factors: hazard, exposure and vulnerability. In the case of Harvey, the hazard was the hurricane with its associated winds, storm surge and, most of all, rain. Houston is one of North Americaโ€™s biggest metro areas, making 6.6 million people exposed to this hazard. Finally, thereโ€™s our vulnerability to heavy rainfall events, in this case exacerbated by the cityโ€™s rapid expansion that has paved over former grasslands, overloaded critical infrastructure, challenged urban planning and limited evacuation routes. These three factors explain the immense costs associated with tragedies like Hurricaneย Harvey.

As atmospheric scientists in Texas, we already know the hazards are real. Once the effects of Harvey have been added up, Texas and Louisiana will have been hit by more billion-plus dollar flooding events since 1980 than any otherย states.

We also know that many of these hazards are intensifying. In a warmer world, heavy precipitation is on the rise, which increases the amount of rain associated with a given storm. Sea level is rising, worsening the risks of coastal flooding and storm surge. At the cutting edge of climate research, scientists are also exploring how human-induced change may affect storm intensity and the winds that steer theย hurricanes.

This is why catastrophes like Harvey โ€” in which every extra inch of rain can lead to additional damage and harm โ€” highlight exactly how and why climate change matters to each and every one ofย us.

Sensibleย Response?

People know the climate is changing, but they donโ€™t know how serious it is. Over 70 percent of Americans agree that the climate is changing, but less than half of us believe it will affect usย personally.

Why? Perhaps because the image we associate most often with a changing climate is not the devastation left by a flood in our own state but rather a polar bear perched on a chunk of melting ice or an African farmer bearing silent witness to the impacts of a disaster thatโ€™s taken place on the other side of theย world.

As tragedy unfolds, we must focus on the immediate response. But in the weeks and months that follow, we need to remember that, despite our air conditioners, our insurance and the politicized discourse that suggests that the science is somehow a matter of opinion rather than fact, we are incredibly vulnerable to natural disasters โ€” disasters that are increasingly being amplified in a warmingย world.

Finding safety in Texas: Society as a whole needs to recognize the growing risk of extreme weather events from a changing climate. AP Photo/Gerald Herbert

What sensible, pragmatic, bipartisan steps can we take to increase our resilience to risks that a disaster like Hurricane Harvey represents? This question must be asked, because the current administration has proposed cutting the budget of the National Weather Service and other agencies that study and forecast weather and climate disasters and has rescinded regulations designed to address rising sea levels when constructingย infrastructure.

First and foremost, we should reduce our exposure and build resilience to the hazards we already face today. We canโ€™t continue building in places that we know will flood. We need to build and modernize infrastructure to make our water management systems more resilient to both floods and droughts. We must continue to invest in the weather forecasting systems that provided advance warning and in the public services that build community resilience and provide disasterย response.

Ultimately, though, even these practical steps may not be enough. In a changing climate, building capacity and resilience to cope with todayโ€™s risks leave us unprepared for future extremes. Thatโ€™s why, in order to reduce the risk of disasters both here and abroad, we need to minimize the climate change that is turbocharging these events. And that means reducing our emissions of the heat-trapping greenhouseย gases.

Changing the Riskย Equation

Here again Texas can lead the way. Weโ€™re already number one in wind power production by state, thanks to targeted investments that boosted the power grid connecting cities with windy regions. And weโ€™ve only begun to tap our abundant solarย resources.

The innovations that energy companies have pioneered to build offshore oil platforms can inform the development of, and investment in, offshore wind turbines and their knowledge of producing petrochemicals could be applied to more sustainably producedย biofuels.

There will always be those who claim that the costs of moving to cleaner energy sources and reducing carbon emissions are too high. But the U.S. has improved air quality in ways in which the benefits greatly exceed the costs and replaced ozone-depleting chemicals, all while the economy has grown.

Today, wind and solar power prices are now competitive with fossil fuels across Texas. Across the country, these industries already employ far more people than coal mining. Electric cars may soon be as affordable as gasoline ones and be charged in ways that help balance the fluctuations in wind and solar power. Only someone profoundly pessimistic would bet against the ability of American ingenuity to repower ourย economy.

The ConversationHurricane Harvey exemplifies the risks we all face โ€” and a more dangerous future if we donโ€™t take actions now. More people and vulnerable infrastructure exposed to more frequent and intense hazards equals even greater risk for us in the future. The time to rethink the equation isย now.

Andrew Dessler, Professor of Atmospheric Sciences, Texas A&M University Daniel Cohan, Associate Professor of Environmental Engineering, Rice University, and Katharine Hayhoe, Professor and Director, Climate Science Center, Texas Techย University

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Main image: Hurricane Harvey from the International Space Station on August 28. Credit:ย NASA, CC BY

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