Excellent New Article – in Environment Magazine

Since Michelin ranks restaurants with stars, the Diva has decided to award stars to documents re recovery. Here is the first one I would give 4 stars to:

Making America More Resilience toward Natural Disasters: A Call For Action, by Howard Kunreuther, Erwann Michel-Kerjan and Mark Pauly. From Environment Magazine, July/August 2013.  The title does not really do justice to the wide array of useful content here, so I suggest you download the full article and decide for yourself how you would categorize it.

Some excerpts:

Hurricane Sandy caused an estimated $65 billion in economic losses to residences, business owners, and infrastructure owners. It is the second most costly natural disaster in recent years in the United States, after Hurricane Katrina in 2005, but it is not an outlier; economic and insured losses from devastating natural catastrophes in the United States and worldwide are climbing.

According to Munich Re,2 real-dollar economic losses from natural catastrophes alone have increased from $528 billion (1981–1990), to $1,197 billion (1991–2000), to $1,23 billion (2001–2010). During the past 10 years, the losses were principally due to hurricanes and resulting storm surge occurring in 2004, 2005, and 2008. Figure 1 depicts the evolution of the direct economic losses and the insured portion from great natural disasters over the period 1980–2012.2

There is a wealth of useful information in this article, which makes it hard to summarize. It is thoughtful and clearly writtten. I consider this an essential document, one that I think will be a classic in time.

Independent Review of Calgary Flood is Planned

Alberta Flooding 2013: Auditor General To Look At Causes, Response, Lessons

Alberta’s auditor general is looking into how the province responded to last month’s record flooding and how it plans to mitigate similar disasters in the future.

“The best use of our resources for Albertans would be to provide independent assurance on the quality of planning and the execution of the government’s current flood mitigation efforts,” Merwan Saher has written in a letter to the NDP, which asked for a review.

Saher said he will begin his investigation after Premier Alison Redford’s government has finished its review on the flooding.

New Democrat Leader Brian Mason earlier this month asked Saher to investigate the government’s response, given the province failed to act on key recommendations to prevent flooding following similar problems in 2005.