4.7 Article

Risky Development: Increasing Exposure to Natural Hazards in the United States

Journal

EARTHS FUTURE
Volume 9, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020EF001795

Keywords

natural hazards; exposure; risk; Zillow; vulnerability

Funding

  1. Earth Lab through the University of Colorado Boulder's Grand Challenge Initiative
  2. NSF's Humans, Disasters, and the Built Environment program [1924670]
  3. Innovative Seed Grant program at CU Boulder
  4. Eunice Kennedy Shriver Institute of Child Health Human and Human Development [2P2CHD066613-06]

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Losses from natural hazards are increasing, with development contributing to the exposure of vulnerable assets and populations to risks. Studies show that a large number of buildings are located in hazard hotspots, a result of decades of sustained growth, indicating potential for even larger future losses if development in hazardous areas is not limited.
Losses from natural hazards are escalating dramatically, with more properties and critical infrastructure affected each year. Although the magnitude, intensity, and/or frequency of certain hazards has increased, development contributes to this unsustainable trend, as disasters emerge when natural disturbances meet vulnerable assets and populations. To diagnose development patterns leading to increased exposure in the conterminous United States (CONUS), we identified earthquake, flood, hurricane, tornado, and wildfire hazard hotspots, and overlaid them with land use information from the Historical Settlement Data Compilation data set. Our results show that 57% of structures (homes, schools, hospitals, office buildings, etc.) are located in hazard hotspots, which represent only a third of CONUS area, and similar to 1.5 million buildings lie in hotspots for two or more hazards. These critical levels of exposure are the legacy of decades of sustained growth and point to our inability, lack of knowledge, or unwillingness to limit development in hazardous zones. Development in these areas is still growing more rapidly than the baseline rates for the nation, portending larger future losses even if the effects of climate change are not considered.

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