ResilienceMore extreme heat coming to the Southeast

Published 30 July 2015

The Southeastern United States and Texas are uniquely at risk from climate change, according to a new report release the other day by the Risky Business Project. The Southeast region also faces the highest risks of coastal property losses in the nation as seas rise and storms surge. Between $48.2 billion and $68.7 billion worth of existing coastal property in the Southeast will likely be below sea level by 2050. Cities like Miami and New Orleans will likely be severely affected. The dramatic increase in the number of days above 95 degrees Fahrenheit will have a deleterious effect on people’s health, agricultural yields.

The Southeastern United States and Texas are uniquely at risk from climate change, according to a new report release the other day by the Risky Business Project — a non-partisan initiative chaired by Hank Paulson, Michael R. Bloomberg, and Tom Steyer. The report finds that across the region there is potential significantly to reduce these risks if policymakers and business leaders act to reduce emissions and adapt to a changing climate.

The report, Come Heat and High Water: Climate Risk in the Southeastern U.S. and Texas, finds that across the Southeast, the average number of days above 95 degrees Fahrenheit is likely to increase from an average nine days per year to up sixty-two days per year by mid-century. By the end of this century this number will likely increase to 124 days per year.

Extreme heat will harm the health of people in the Southeast. Over the next twenty-five years, Texas will likely see up to 2,580 additional deaths per year and Florida up to 1,840 additional deaths per year due to the increase in extreme heat. By mid-century, these two states combined are likely to see up to almost 10,000 additional deaths per year. Elderly people will be particularly vulnerable to these changes, as will children and outdoor workers.

Rising heat and humidity pose severe risks to the health of citizens across the Southeast, especially among the elderly, the infirm, and populations that do not have access to reliable air conditioning” said Risky Business Project Risk Committee member Dr. Al Sommer. “In the Southeast, where we are likely to see new temperature records, we will need better emergency response systems.”

The Risky Business Southeast report drives home the reality that we must deal with climate risk before it’s too late,” said Risky Business Project co-chair Hank Paulson. “From more extreme heat that threatens labor productivity and crop yields in the agriculture sector to storm surges that could imperil infrastructure and manufacturing, which is driving new growth in the region, we face mounting risk to the economy and our way of life. Business and government leaders must face the fact that our current course is unsustainable.”

The Southeast region also faces the highest risks of coastal property losses in the nation as seas rise and storms surge. Between $48.2 billion and $68.7 billion worth of existing coastal property in the Southeast will likely be below sea level by 2050. Cities like Miami and New Orleans will likely be severely affected.

Climate change poses major risks to Southeastern cities and to the health of people living in the region,” said Risky Business Project co-chair Michael R. Bloomberg. “By explaining the potential impacts of climate change on local communities, this report can help businesses and government make smart investments that protect infrastructure and improve people’s lives.”

Without adaptation by farmers commodity crops are likely to face severe yield declines. Over the next five to twenty-five years, the Southeast will likely see losses in corn yields of up to 21 percent, and in soybean yields of up to 14 percent. By the end of the century, these crops will take an even bigger hit: corn yields will likely decrease by up to 86 percent, and soybean yields will likely decrease by up to 76 percent. States that depend heavily on agriculture, like Kentucky, stand to be particularly affected.

The Southeastern United States is already feeling the negative impacts of climate change — and if we don’t take action, people living throughout the region will pay the price,” said Risky Business Project co-chair Tom Steyer. “To protect our economic security in the region, business leaders, cities and investors must take swift action to mitigate the risks of climate change.”

Come Heat and High Water: Climate Risk in the Southeastern U.S. and Texas is the fourth report from the Risky Business Project. In 2014, the Project released Risky Business: The Economic Risks of Climate Change to the United States, which employed a standard risk-assessment analysis to determine the range of potential consequences of climate change for each region of the United States — as well as for selected sectors of the economy. Earlier this year, it released Heat in the Heartland, a follow-up report that zeroed in on potential impacts in the Midwest.