Climate and solar signals in property damage losses from hurricanes affecting the United States

被引:0
|
作者
Thomas H. Jagger
James B. Elsner
R. King Burch
机构
[1] Florida State University,Department of Geography
来源
Natural Hazards | 2011年 / 58卷
关键词
Hurricanes; Property damage; Loss model; Environment; Risk compound Poisson; MCMC;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The authors show that historical property damage losses from US hurricanes contain climate signals. The methodology is based on a statistical model that combines a specification for the number of loss events with a specification for the amount of loss per event. Separate models are developed for annual and extreme losses. A Markov chain Monte Carlo procedure is used to generate posterior samples from the models. Results indicate the chance of at least one loss event increases when the springtime north–south surface pressure gradient over the North Atlantic is weaker than normal, the Atlantic ocean is warmer than normal, El Niño is absent, and sunspots are few. However, given at least one loss event, the magnitude of the loss per annum is related only to ocean temperature. The 50-year return level for a loss event is largest under a scenario featuring a warm Atlantic Ocean, a weak North Atlantic surface pressure gradient, El Niño, and few sunspots. The work provides a framework for anticipating hurricane losses on seasonal and multi-year time scales.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:541 / 557
页数:16
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Distributions and Trends of Death and Destruction from Hurricanes in the United States, 1900-2008
    Willoughby, H. E.
    NATURAL HAZARDS REVIEW, 2012, 13 (01) : 57 - 64
  • [32] Rayleigh-Wave Dispersion Curves from Energetic Hurricanes in the Southeastern United States
    Feng, Xuping
    Chen, Xiaofei
    BULLETIN OF THE SEISMOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA, 2022, 112 (02) : 622 - 633
  • [33] Identification of large scale climate patterns affecting snow variability in the eastern United States
    Morin, Jennifer
    Block, Paul
    Rajagopalan, Balaji
    Clark, Martyn
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CLIMATOLOGY, 2008, 28 (03) : 315 - 328
  • [34] Property Damage and Insured Losses from the 2001 World Trade Center Attacks
    Grossi, Patricia
    PEACE ECONOMICS PEACE SCIENCE AND PUBLIC POLICY, 2009, 15 (02)
  • [35] The Ancillary Benefits from Climate Policy in the United States
    Britt Groosman
    Nicholas Z. Muller
    Erin O’Neill-Toy
    Environmental and Resource Economics, 2011, 50 : 585 - 603
  • [36] Climate Change and Inequality: Evidence from the United States
    Chisadza, Carolyn
    Clance, Matthew
    Sheng, Xin
    Gupta, Rangan
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2023, 15 (06)
  • [37] The Ancillary Benefits from Climate Policy in the United States
    Groosman, Britt
    Muller, Nicholas Z.
    O'Neill-Toy, Erin
    ENVIRONMENTAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS, 2011, 50 (04): : 585 - 603
  • [38] Core Elements Affecting Sharing: Evidence from the United States
    Burinskiene, Aurelija
    Leonaviciene, Edita
    Grybaite, Virginija
    Lingaitiene, Olga
    Merkevicius, Juozas
    SUSTAINABILITY, 2021, 13 (07)
  • [39] The climate and air-quality benefits of wind and solar power in the United States
    Millstein, Dev
    Wiser, Ryan
    Bolinger, Mark
    Barbose, Galen
    NATURE ENERGY, 2017, 2 (09):
  • [40] The climate and air-quality benefits of wind and solar power in the United States
    Dev Millstein
    Ryan Wiser
    Mark Bolinger
    Galen Barbose
    Nature Energy, 2