90% of U.S. counties had a weather disaster between 2011 and 2021
I'm Dr. Anthony Lazaritz, and this is Climate Connections.
Very few parts of the U.S. have been untouched by extreme weather.
According to a recent report, 90% of U.S. counties had a federally declared weather
disaster between 2011 and 2021.
Some counties have had as many as 12 disasters during that time.
That's Amy Chester of Rebuild by Design.
Her group recently released the Atlas of Disaster, an online map of these events.
And the one thing that we found extraordinarily interesting is that no matter what state you
look at, disasters are all over.
It's not just a coastal issue in a coastal state.
In addition to the number of disasters in each county, the Atlas includes data on social
vulnerability and energy reliability.
And it shows the federal cost of weather disasters in each state, which in some places
topped a thousand dollars per resident over a decade.
And why that's important is that we're able to show that we as Americans are all paying
for this.
Climate change is expected to bring more extreme weather to many areas.
So we hope that people really dig in kind of deep into this report and start questioning
what is our government doing right now and start getting involved.
Climate Connections is produced by the Yale Center for Environmental Communication.
To hear more stories like this, visit climateconnections.org.