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Climate Crisis, NCEI/NOAA, NOAA USA 2024 Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters, Weather/Climate-Related Disasters

U.S. 2024 Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters (released Jan/2025)
During 2024, thousands of our American brothers and sisters lost loved ones, property, and jobs to various weather/climate-related disasters that struck their state. Many of them are still recovering from their losses. Without resources, others will never recover. Tragedy does not impact us all in the same way.
On January 10, 2025, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) released the data and analysis quantifying the economic costs of the disasters that reached or exceeded US$1 billion. They confirmed 27 weather/climate disaster events, amounting to a total of US$182.7 billion. This places 2024 as the fourth costliest on record, trailing behind 2017 (US$395.9 billion), 2025 (US$268.5 billion), and 2022 (US$183.6 billion).
Killing 568 people, these weather/climate disasters were of several categories:
- 2 winter storm/cold wave events (across the Northwest and central/southern USA in mid-January).
- 1 wildfire event (the South Fork Fire in New Mexico that destroyed many homes, vehicles, businesses, and other infrastructure).
- 1 drought and heat wave event (causing impacts across the southern, eastern and northwestern USA).
- 1 flooding event (the Upper Midwest Flooding in mid-June across several states).
- 6 tornado outbreaks (across the central and southeastern USA).
- 5 hurricanes/tropical cyclones (Beryl, Debby, Francine, Helene, and Milton).
- 11 severe weather/hail events (across many parts of the country).
The weather/climate disasters that caused the most damage and inflicted punishment on many communities include:
- Hurricane Helene, September 24-29: 219 deaths, US$79.6 billion
- Hurricane Milton, October 9-10: 32 deaths, US$34.3 billion
- Hurricane Beryl, July 8: 46 deaths, US$7.2 billion
- Central, Southern & Southeast Tornado Outbreak, May 6-9: 3 deaths, US$6.6 billion
The upward trend of these weather/climate disasters over the years should be a warning of worse yet to come. Falling for the climate change-denial narrative of the fossil fuel industry, responsible for heating up our planet, will not whisk away these disasters.
The total cost of the US billion-dollar disasters over the last five years (2020-2024) is US$746.7 billion, with a 5-year average annual cost of US$149.3 billion. This 5-year average cost is more than double the 45-year (1980-2024) average annual cost of US$64.8 billion.
Since 1980, our nation has been hit by 403 weather/climate disasters where damages/costs reached or exceeded US$1 billion (including CPI adjustment to 2024). The total cost of these 403 events exceeds US$2.915 trillion. For how long can our communities and states sustain such tremendous economic loss without collapse?
According to the NCEI/NOAA analysis, there are several potential explanations for this upward trend:
- Increases in exposure: more assets at risk;
- Increases in vulnerability: the amount of damage a hazard of given intensity, such as high winds, can cause at a location; and
- Increases in the frequency and intensity of some types of extreme events due to human-caused climate change.
Where we choose to live also drives up the cost of these extreme weather events. With increased housing demand, property development has continued in high-risk areas like coasts, the fire-prone wildland-urban interface in the West, and river floodplains. For example, current estimates of property and capital losses from the Los Angeles County wildfires in January 2025 fall between US$95 billion and US$164 billion. For how long can we continue to live in high-risk areas?
Bear in mind that NCEI’s data does not include events costing less than US$1 billion. Events that also inflict pain on communities across the nation. The NCEI is currently considering the suggestion from the American Meteorological Society to incorporate smaller cost thresholds into their analysis. In adding hundreds of events costing less than US$1 billion down to US$100 million, the NCEI would give us a much better picture of the frequency and cost distribution of these hazards to our lives and economies, local and national.
On Thursday, February 27, the DOGE* team struck NOAA with Musk’s chainsaw. Who will grab the best cuts for monetization? With the proposed dismantling of NOAA, I fear for our safety and our livelihoods in the face of more frequent extreme weather/climate disasters. Sometimes, we don’t know the good we enjoy until we lose it.
* DOGE: Department of Government Efficiency
An important catalogue of events and their consequences
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Thanks very much, Derrick.
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A very sobering look at last year’s climate disasters, Rosaliene. We all knew it was bad, but your detailed breakdown made it hit home again.
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Dave, this detailed breakdown is the work of our climate scientists at NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI).
I neglected to share their data of the highest cumulative damage costs of weather/climate disasters by region since the 1980s. It turns out that California is not numbered among the top three regions: #1 Florida, #2 Texas, and #3 Louisiana. Living along the coastline of the now-renamed Gulf of America is not the best place to be in the United States.
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It was hard hitting LIKE on this post because the facts are horrifying. Thank you, though, for laying it out so succinctly. The elites clearly want to depopulate the planet so there’s more for them, and they’ve sent out a drug-addled, racist billionaire to do their bidding. I appreciate your presence on the planet, Rosaliene. Solidarity.
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Tracy, thanks very much for your kind comments. With a climate change-denier in chief at the helm, I expect that it will become more challenging to obtain up-to-date, reliable information. Solidarity.
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You have become an even more important source of information in a time of information suppression and fake news. Thank you, Rosaliene.
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Thanks very much, Dr. Stein. Should the USA weather/climate data become inaccessible to non-paying consumers, I’m in the process of compiling other reliable sources of information, national and international.
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Excellent news on your efforts, Rosaliene. Thank you!
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You’re welcome, Dr. Stein. Just doing my small part.
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Thanks for this info Rosaliene. Every day is a new disaster, it seems and yet folks still argue over whether climate change (no matter how caused) is real, doing nothing to mitigate damages and death. The dismantling of NOAA is another case of the idiots in charge having no clue what they are doing. They only measure success in how much money and toys they have. Happy Sunday. Allan.
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You’re welcome, Allan. Unfortunately for the masses of humanity, the minority billionaire class live in a different world far removed from the threats we face from these weather/climate disaster events.
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Whew! What a year! Can’t wait to see what this year will bring except that by the time I find out about it it may be too late. I guess I’ll have to start watching the smarter animals in my garden.
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Mara, it was quite a year, indeed! I’m still processing the power of Hurricane Helene and its impact on so many southeastern states. I could not look away.
The National Weather Service has been decoupled from NOAA. It now has a new link at https://www.weather.gov/ where you can still obtain weather data about your city and region.
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Hurricane Helene was a whopper and devastated areas that weren’t expecting it. Thanks for the link. I go there everyday. As it turns out the head quarters of NOAA is down the street from me and I just got back from a protest where there was a good turn out and Musk is not a popular guy.
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Mara, a big thank you to you and your neighbors for taking a stand to protect NOAA! Glad to hear that our shadow president is not popular in your city. One of my Republican neighbors is very angry. “I didn’t vote for him,” she told me.
I assumed that the NOAA headquarters was in Washington DC. What a surprise to learn from you today that it’s in Silver Spring, Maryland! For readers who are interested, the location of its regional offices can be found at https://www.noaa.gov/jetstream/regions.
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You’re welcome, Rosaliene! It was actually kind of fun especially getting the passing traffic to honk. I’m glad to hear your Republican neighbor is not a Musk fan!
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🙂
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I’m shaking my head at the numbers, both of how many tragedies and of the cost. We live in a changed world, in so many ways.
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Tamara, we definitely live in a changed world. Some states are calling on the fossil fuel companies to pay the costs of these disasters.
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The idea has merit, but unfortunately it may be decades into the future!
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And a political disaster too!
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It sure is, Ashley! The intention, according to a top government official, is to traumatize working people.
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SOS!
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Neil, there will come a time when there will be no help coming from the federal government. We will be on our own.
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This list appears to keep growing. An important topic, Rosaliene.
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Mary, we can no longer ignore these weather/climate disaster events, whenever and wherever they occur across our nation.
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We were doing so little to reserve this, and now we will be doing less. It’s frightening.
I’ve never seen this kind of analysis which is important. Thanks for the post.
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It’s indeed frightening, Kym, especially as the new administration is planning to cut the FEMA budget and transferring disaster-response to the state.
You’re welcome, Kym. I don’t recall when NOAA first started to release this annual picture of the cost of these weather/climate disasters, but I think it’s vital information for budget planning at both state and federal levels.
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Your writing and research are greatly appreciated. Shocking devastation. Thank you for the article, Rosaliene.
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Thanks very much, Michele. You’re welcome 🙂
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and 2025 will be worse, Rose!
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I agree, Pam! Sad to say, California will feature on the 2025 map for the Los Angeles County wildfires.
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Beyond sad….
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These findings are so disturbing Rosaliene, yet not surprising especially in reference to the climate change-deniers! I simply don’t understand how people can’t see what Mother Nature is trying to warn them of. Thanks for sharing! 🌎🙏🏼💖
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You’re welcome, Kym. Some people, it seems, gotta feel the pain themselves to wake up.
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You know Rosaliene, that is an excellent point! When they finally wake up, it may be too far-gone and too late. 😖 We are still going to talk about it over and over again. Thank you for doing just that. 🤗🙏🏼😊
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🙂 ❤
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If I were on my phone, I’d be leaving the big-eyed emoji here.
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Thank you for bringing this truth to us, Rosaliene. Good point about building in high risk areas. The east coast city of Wilmington we moved from was becoming more and more congested and growing like a toxic weed. Now, I’m reading about big wildfires in North and South Carolina. The cuts being made by the current administration are dangerously insane.
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You’re welcome, JoAnna. I saw the news about the wildfires in the Carolinas and wondered if you were affected in any way. So glad that you’ve not been directly impacted.
With regards to the cuts, one of the conservative promises of the framers of the Mandate/Project 2025 is to “Dismantle the administrative state and return self-governance to the American people” (Foreword: A Promise to America by Kevin D. Roberts, PhD, p.3).
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It was “bone dry” as David said, until last night when we finally got some rain. I hope you’re doing okay. “Dismantle the administrative state and return self-governance to the American people” sounds like the libertarian party.
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JoAnna, I read about the drought. We got some rain too, but not much. They do sound like the libertarian party.
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Thank you for this very sobering and undeniable summation of the effects of climate and weather events, Rosaliene. This is a concise and very well presented statement of facts, and the consequences of an almost complete lack of action by governments in both of our countries as well as the rest of the developed world.
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You’re welcome, Steve. Do you have a similar yearly report in Canada?
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Hi Rosaliene,
The Government of Canada produced this report: https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/services/ten-most-impactful-weather-stories/2024.html
It also maintains a long-term database here: https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/services/ten-most-impactful-weather-stories/2024.html
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Steve, thanks for sharing the links to the Canadian report and database. You’ve not been spared from these weather/climate disasters. The climate crisis impacts us all.
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You’re welcome, Rosaliene. Disasters and climate change certainly know no borders.
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Thanks for your report, although the news is grim. “Increases in the frequency and intensity” of these weather events is the fault of human created problems.
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You’re welcome, Rebecca. When we don’t voluntarily change our way of being and doing, we will be forced to do in a much different future landscape.
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