Weather and Business

From BloombergNews: Wall Street Embraces Weather Risk in New Era of Storms. Climate change revs up number, intensity of weather disasters. New high priests of finance: Forecasters who keep cash flowing

From IBM and AccuWeather Inc. to outfits like Riskpulse, Jupiter and DTN, companies that track weather have created an intensely competitive new industry in just the last five years. Their client lists have grown to include insurers, banks and commodity traders, engineers and architects, shippers, retailers and the travel industry. And little is done without their input.

As global warming makes extreme weather more common, meteorologists have become the high priests of finance, mitigating uncertainty and boosting risk-related profits. “There’s kind of a wave building,” said Tory Grieves, membership manager at The Collider, a North Carolina nonprofit that helps climate entrepreneurs train and network.

FEMA Building Science Fact Sheets

This is a five-page fact sheet: FEMA Building Science Resources to Help Reduce Risk and Improve Resilience. There are other documents in this series. Thanks to Chris Jones for this URL to the full list, which I could not readily locate.

Another source of related documents: Building Science and Risk MAP Fact Sheets. Thanks to FEMA’s Building Science Branch for this citation.

 

 

Politics of Disaster Relief

Impasse Over Aid for Puerto Rico Stalls Billions in Federal Disaster Relief

The Senate on Monday blocked billions of dollars in disaster aid for states across the country as Republicans and Democrats clashed over President Trump’s opposition to sending more food and infrastructure help to Puerto Rico.

Opposition came from both parties for different reasons. Most Republicans refused to endorse a recovery bill passed this year by the House. They cited Mr. Trump’s opposition to the bill’s Puerto Rico funding, as well as their own concerns that the bill lacked money for Midwestern states, like Iowa and Nebraska, that have since been devastated by flooding and tornadoes.

Introducing FEMA’s CISA

From Homeland Security Today: CISA’s Brian Harrell Focuses on Building Culture of Resiliency, One Threat at a Time.

On the heels of a “bomb cyclone” that slammed the Missouri River Basin with catastrophic flooding and more than a billion dollars in damage, Brian Harrell heads for Nebraska. The mission of the assistant secretary for infrastructure protection is to visit various critical sectors – from public and private electric utility plants to chemical plants – and to discuss with federal and state emergency management leaders the devastation of the recent severe flooding, address security at a chemical facility, and meet with the Nebraska State Police.

“Today I was able to witness the flooding devastation in Nebraska firsthand,” Harrell told Homeland Security Today on Thursday, adding that his department, the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), “is dedicated to providing assistance, expertise, and assessments to our dams, utilities, chemical plants, and infrastructure owners and operators in Nebraska.”

Book Review: Disaster Recovery Through the Lens of Justice

Disaster Recovery Through the Lens of Justice, by  Alessandra Jerolleman. Palgrave Publisher, 2019.  108 pp. Cost: $69.99 paper, $54.99 online.

Reviewed by Erika Pham and Sahar Derakhshan, PhD candidates, University of South Carolina Department of Geography, Columbia, SC

Disaster Recovery Through the Lens of Justice is an examination of the nexus between justice and disaster recovery. Author Alessandra Jerolleman aims to combine concepts of justice with resilience and vulnerability, which are used in the context of Zakour and Swager’s (2018) Vulnerability-Plus (V+) theory. She discusses the potential for the application of a capabilities justice framework, and uses the idea of “Just Recovery” to account for the elements of justice and its relevance to resilience and recovery, arguing that resilience and recovery are not possible if there is no justice. She sets out to explain an initial set of four principles characterizing Just Recovery: 1) the ability of the community to exercise agency through free and informed choice; 2) any unequal treatment needs to be justified by the discriminator; 3) the community needs to define adaptation for holistic disaster risk reduction and consider their own contexts; and 4) people require equal access to resources and programs for Just Recovery.

The book consists of eight chapters, the first of which provides a brief introduction and purpose behind the application of a justice framework to concepts of recovery, explaining how the mechanisms behind current policies’ reproduction and magnification of vulnerability and disparate outcomes are not fully understood. Jerolleman introduces the ideas of the next several chapters, allowing the reader to become familiar with the structure and chain of thought for the rest of the book, as well as the concepts to be investigated. These chapters serve to further illuminate the initial set of four principles of Just Recovery proposed by the author, and leads to a final call to action for gauging the role of current disaster-related policies in sustaining injustice.

Each chapter starts with a clearly defined goal, in addition to an introduction of the presented concepts and applied theories, from fields of sociology, psychology, public policy, and political economy. The concepts of deservedness and survivor agency are built through consecutive chapters to further explain the creation of a corrosive community that prevents equal access to resources. The chapters dedicated to the review of disaster-related federal public policies and legislation, their limitations, and their implementation in the U.S., complements the argument of equal access to resources and informed decision-making for a Just Recovery. The author nicely employs examples from Hurricanes Maria and Harvey along with older comparisons from Hurricanes Katrina and Sandy, the Deepwater Horizon Oil Spill, and other events throughout the chapters; especially, in defining deserving victims, corrosive communities, and disaster capitalism. The examination of case studies, and as the author phrases, the “socio-spatial inequalities”, is fairly and succinctly depicted in the text; however, including some maps or pictures would have helped the readers to better visualize and understand the disparities, for example in the case of New Orleans.

To tie it all together, the author reminds the reader that in examining current policies, assuming a position of non-neutrality is key to unveiling and fixing some of the systemic injustices in place, and asks the pertinent question, “Resilience for whom?” Jerolleman avoids being dry by effectively integrating examples of recent past disasters, and thoughtfully outlines and examines some of the social, political, psychological and economic factors that contribute to the injustices in hazard and disaster landscapes, taking a multifaceted approach to discuss the interplay between different systems and the implications for risk reduction and resilience.

This book is recommended to scholars, managers and policy makers in the field of natural/technological hazards in particular, as well as people who want to learn more about disaster and environmental justice topics in general. What the author does nicely in this book is describe in an accessible manner the typically complex relationships between societal and governmental processes within the hazards and disasters sphere. Finally, the examples from recent events throughout the book are valuable additions to the discussion of Just Recovery, which further illuminates the necessity of considerations and call to action that are raised by the author.