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In 2025, the US Suffered a Billion-Dollar Disaster Every 10 Days

1/13/26
DISASTERS
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Last year began with the costliest wildfires in American history, as a series of blazes tore across Los Angeles for nearly all of January. A parade of other catastrophes followed: severe storms across the southern and northeastern United States, tornadoes in the central states, drought and heat waves through the western expanse of the country. 

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You’ve Heard of Climate Change. What Is the Climate Debt Doom Loop?

1/7/26
DISASTERS
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Municipal bonds are a time-honored way to fund roads, schools, bridges and other public projects while paying investors interest, usually at tax-free rates.

But what happens when floods, hurricanes, wildfires and other climate events buckle roads, swamp public buildings and disrupt the municipal revenues that pay for the bond debt?

They can create what researchers from Northeastern University call a climate debt doom loop that makes it even harder for cities and towns to respond to and prepare for future disasters.

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EPA’s Climate Science Erasure

By: Staff
12/9/25
TARGETING SCIENCE
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The Trump administration has removed scientific data and climate change information from U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) webpages, including all references to human activities driving climate change. This includes key U.S. climate change indicators such as changes in temperature, drought and extreme precipitation over the last few decades.

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Using Smartphones to Improve Disaster Search and Rescue

By: Staff
12/8/25
SEARCH & RESCUE
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When a natural disaster strikes, time is of the essence if people are trapped under rubble. Conventional methods use radar-based detection or employ acoustics that rely on sounds made by victims.

Since most people carry their phones with them every day, Shogo Takada, a student at the University of Tokyo, is working on a way to use smartphone microphones to assist in locating disaster victims.

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A West Texas County Wants to Better Prepare for Floods. Paying for It Will Be Tricky.

12/1/25
FLOODS
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When it rains here, West Texans brace for the worst. With nowhere to go, water collects across sidewalks, roads and highways — the flat, desert landscape becomes a wetland in the blink of an eye.

Local officials in Ector County, which includes Odessa, said the region’s drainage system is out of date. But paying for upgrades will be a tremendous challenge.

Population, housing and commercial development have spiked, and the infrastructure has not kept up. Its drainage system, installed in the 1970s, is not equipped to handle the growth, county officials said.

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Study Warns Past Heat Waves Would Be Far More Lethal Now

By: Staff
12/1/25
CLIMATE ADAPTATION
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In brief

·  New research reveals how much rising global temperatures could amplify mortality risks if past hazardous weather patterns occur again.

·  The weather patterns that produced past extreme heat events in Europe could kill tens of thousands more people if repeated in today’s hotter climate.

·  Mitigating further global warming and preparing health systems, homes, and communities for the hottest days ahead can reduce deaths from extreme heat events.

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