Our 2025 Youth Fellowship is live! Find out more and apply here: 2025 Youth Fellowship

Climate change: This is the impact of extreme weather events on the economy

Climate change: This is the impact of extreme weather events on the economy

Tuesday, 14 September 2021 | By Katharina Buchholz, Data Journalist, Statista

Share This Page:

Hurricane Ida, the fourth and to-date strongest storm of the 2021 Atlantic hurricane season, has made its way to New York City, albeit as a much weaker tropical storm. Nevertheless, Ida caused widespread flooding and a state of emergency declaration in the United States’ biggest city. The current season has so far produced four out of the six to ten predicted hurricanes, but the most active and dangerous time between August and October is still underway.

Over the past decade, global economic losses from weather events like storms, floods, droughts and wildfires have grown more costly. During the first decade of the 21st century, there were only two years when weather disasters cost more than $200 billion (including 2010). In the second decade, those $200 billion-dollar-a-year losses seem to have become more normal, with seven out of ten years grossing over $200 billion in global losses from weather events. The costliest year on record was registered in 2017, totaling over $470 billion in losses, including those from major Hurricanes Harvey, Maria and Irma. All in all, weather damages totaled approximately $2.5 trillion around the globe between 2011 and 2020, up almost 50 percent from the 2001-2010 figure.

As part of the 2020 Weather, Climate and Catastrophe Insight report, insurance service provider AON points out that due to the influences of climate change, it is expected that “the storms which do develop have the potential to be larger, more intense, and pose a greater risk to coastal and inland vulnerabilities.

Weather damages totaled approximately $2.5 trillion around the globe between 2011 and 2020. Image: Statista

To find out more about the Race to Resilience, please click here.

This article was first published on Statista.

Related Reading

 Gaia Vince: “When I look at the practical progress that's been made, it is in cities where the most progressive action is taking place"

Gaia Vince: “When I look at the practical progress that's been made, it is in cities where the most progressive action is taking place"

Wednesday, 19 February 2025

Storytelling Adaptation Cities Resilience Human Settlements
Transforming Food Systems: Building Momentum from COP 29 to COP 30

Transforming Food Systems: Building Momentum from COP 29 to COP 30

Tuesday, 17 December 2024

Adaptation Agriculture Campaigns COP 29 Food Global Ambassadors Nature Resilience
JD’s Story: Transforming Alaska’s cold-water diving into a force for marine conservation and community resilience

JD’s Story: Transforming Alaska’s cold-water diving into a force for marine conservation and community resilience

Friday, 13 December 2024

Adaptation Food Nature Resilience
Porfiria’s Story: Redefining shark conservation by turning fishermen into ocean guardians in Baja California Sur

Porfiria’s Story: Redefining shark conservation by turning fishermen into ocean guardians in Baja California Sur

Tuesday, 10 December 2024

Adaptation Climate Justice Food Nature Women Youth Water Resilience