Harvey: PA Climate Change Impacts Assessment Warns Of Increased Risk Of Injury, Death From Extreme Weather Events
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In a Tweet last Sunday morning, the National Weather Service called the torrential rainfall in Texas and nearby areas from now Tropical Storm Harvey “unprecedented & all impacts are unknown & beyond anything experienced.”

Some are calling Harvey a 1,000 year storm.

But much closer to home, the August 2015 PA Climate Impacts Assessment Report done by a team of scientists at Penn State University for the Department of Environmental Protection during the Corbett and Wolf Administrations warns “The risk of injury and death from extreme weather events could increase as a consequence of climate change”

The report continues, saying climate change “will increase the probability that individual storms will be stronger and with heavier rainfall” and “non-tropical extreme rainfall events are expected to increase.”

The consequences of more extreme weather events both in warm and cold weather will, according to the report, increase pathogen loads, nutrient and sediment runoff polluting streams and rivers, cause damage to infrastructure from flooding, wind and snow and ice storms (including related snow-melt flooding), deaths caused by heat waves or extremely cold weather, increased tree mortality and increasing trigger events for pollen-induced asthma.

The PA Emergency Management Agency estimated in 2007 329,337 people lived on the 100-year floodplain statewide, 404,860 lived on the 200-year floodplain and 593,040 live on the 500-year floodplain in Pennsylvania.  This ranks Pennsylvania in the top five states for inland flooding threat.

A new report issued by the Center for Rural Pennsylvania Friday found “very heavy precipitation” has increased by 71 percent over the last 54 years in the Northeast and Pennsylvania putting the 831,000 people living on floodplains in the state at even more risk of flooding.  Click Here for more.

Over the last 10 years in Pennsylvania there have been over 18,000 homeowner claims made for flood damage under the federal Flood Insurance Program totaling $515 million in damage, according to the Department of Insurance.  Click Here to research flood insurance options or talk to your insurance professional.

Statewide flood damage estimates from PEMA show in a 100-year flood event 131,735 homes are at risk of damage, 161,944 homes in a 200-year event and 237,216 homes in a 500-year flood.

Statewide commercial economic loss estimates by PEMA show in a 100-year flood event there would be $8.5 billion, in a 200-year flood event there would be $9.5 billion and in a 500-year flood $12.1 billion in commercial economic loss.

Flood damage estimates are available by county from PEMA in the ArcMap format.

Pennsylvania’s inland flooding threat is projected to increase by 40 percent by 2050.

Click Here for a copy of the Penn State PA Climate Impacts Assessment Report.  [Note: The report has not yet been finalized based on the comments received in 2015.]

Trump Revokes Flood Zone Protection

On August 15 President Trump announced he issued a new Executive Order rolling back rules designed to protect federally-funded infrastructure projects from flooding and dangerous storms caused by climate change.

“This overregulated permitting process is a massive, self-inflicted wound on our country,” Trump said standing at a podium in Trump Tower in New York City. “It’s disgraceful. Denying our people much needed investments in their community.”

No amount of precautions could have dealt with the sudden, catastrophic flooding caused over the last few days by Harvey, but it seems like a prudent step to at least evaluate the flood risks to federally-funded infrastructure projects before taxpayer money is invested in them.

You can’t say we haven’t been warned.

NewsClips:

Private Coverage Urged In PA In Flood Insurance Reauthorization

Editorial: PA Needs To Require Flood Insurance In Mapped Zones

Will Future Storms Be Worse Than Harvey? Debate Over Climate And Hurricanes

Cusick: Harvey Causing Gasoline Price Increases In Pennsylvania 

Gasoline Prices Surge As Drivers Rush To Fill Their Tanks

Lehigh Valley Gasoline Prices Jump Thanks To Harvey

Harvey To Impact Holiday Weekend Gasoline Prices

Western PA Gasoline Prices Surge Ahead of Holiday Weekend

Impact From Harvey To Be Felt In Higher Gasoline Prices In Mid-Atlantic Region

Lancaster Gasoline Prices Could Jump 15 Cents Because Of Harvey

Harvey Shuts Down Colonial Pipeline Supplying Fuel To East Coast

Harvey Hurting Texas Refinery Output, But Storm’s Full Economic Hit Too Early To Tell

Harvey Knocks Out More Refineries Shifting Global Oil Flows

DOE Taps Emergency Oil Reserve In Wake Of Harvey

Philly Chemical Maker Tries To Keep Flooded Texas Plant From Exploding

How Is Harvey Affecting Lehigh Valley Businesses?

Nestle Donates Bottled Water To Aid Those Affected By Harvey

Harvey-Level Damage Probably Won’t Happen In Philly, But Intense Flooding Already Does

Most Harvey Flood Victims On Hook To Pay For Home Repairs

Harvey Flood Claims Will Hit Insurance Program As Congress Struggles To Fix It

Toomey: Harvey Relief Can’t Repeat Sandy’s Big Spending Mistake

AP: Toomey Predicts Quick Aid To Harvey Victims

Scientists Say Harvey May Be The Soggy Sign Of Future Storms

Op-Ed: Don’t Blamer Climate Change For Harvey, Blame Society

Why Harvey Hasn’t Sent Natural Gas Prices Soaring Like Katrina Did

White House Defends Trump’s Rolling Back Flood Hazard Regulations

Trump Rescinded Flood Risk Rules 2 Weeks Before Hurricane Harvey Hit

Trump Order Undermines Rebuilding Better For Future Floods

Editorial: U.S. Catastrophically Vulnerable To Natural Disasters

Editorial: Focus On Trump’s Response To Future Flooding In U.S.

Editorial: Why Development, More Than Climate Change Caused Houston’s Flooding

Harvey Cleanup Tests Trump Plan To Shrink EPA By 8 Percent

As Harvey Raged, Nuclear Power Plant Workers Remained At Controls

Related Stories:

71% Increase In Very Heavy Precipitation In Last 54 Years, 831,000 Pennsylvanians Living At Risk On Floodplains

Federal Flood Insurance Program Set To Expire On Sept. 30 Without Action By Congress

Harvey: Investing In Green Infrastructure Offers Triple Benefits: Reduces Flooding, Nutrient, Sediment Runoff

Harvey: Feds, DEP Act To Deal With Expected Gasoline, Fuel Supply Disruptions

[Posted: August 28, 2017]


9/4/2017

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