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Tornadoes, floods and blizzards... U.S. is hit by a record FIVE billion-dollar weather disasters in 2011 (and it's only May)

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  • Floods in Mississippi to affect 10 per cent of the state's oil industry
  • Worst first half of the year for weather-related costs on record
  • Disasters will affect insurance premiums throughout the country
 

The U.S. has suffered five billion dollars in weather related damage in 2011 so far - the highest ever recorded for a half year.

Tornadoes, blizzards, floods and storms have inflicted record costs because of their severity and their location - hitting populous areas such as Memphis, Tennessee, Raleigh, North Carolina, and Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

And for those who think they have escaped the worst,  experts are now predicting Americans can expect rising insurance premiums as a result of the huge number of claims that continue to roll in.

 
 
Drenched: Street signs are slowly swallowed by floodwater in Vicksburg, Mississippi yesterday.

Drenched: Street signs are slowly swallowed by floodwater in Vicksburg, Mississippi yesterday.

 
Inundated: Flood waters invade downtown Vicksburg on Thursday. The flooding damage is not fully realised yet, but estimates put it at over 1 billion dollars

Inundated: Flood waters invade downtown Vicksburg on Thursday. The flooding damage is not fully realised yet, but estimates put it at over 1 billion dollars

 

Steve Bowen, a meteorologist who tracks weather disasters, told USA Today: 'This has been an incredibly active start to the year.'

Mr Bowen lists three billion-dollar disasters in April alone - excluding the ongoing Mississippi River flooding and a blizzard that struck the Midwest and Northeast from January 31 to February 2.

Both are expected to cost more than $1 billion - the amount the federal government uses as the threshold to highlight the most severe weather disasters.

Robert Hartwig, president of the Insurance Information Institute, said storms this year had: 'Produced significant damage, disruption to business and closures and increased car accidents.'

 
Gaming over: Flood waters engulf the driveway to Fitzgeralds Tunica, a casino and hotel in Robinsonville, Mississippi. The rising water has closed 17 of Mississippi's 19 waterfront casinos

Gaming over: Flood waters engulf the driveway to Fitzgeralds Tunica, a casino and hotel in Robinsonville, Mississippi. The rising water has closed 17 of Mississippi's 19 waterfront casinos

 

 
Damage: Satellite images show the flooded General DeWitt Spain Airport five miles northwest of the central business district of Memphis, Tennessee
Damage: Satellite images show the flooded General DeWitt Spain Airport five miles northwest of the central business district of Memphis, Tennessee
 

Damage: Satellite images show the flooded General DeWitt Spain Airport five miles northwest of the central business district of Memphis,  Tennessee

This year's astronomical costs follow three record-breaking years, where thunderstorms and tornadoes alone have cost Americans $10 billion in annual damage.

Mr Hartwig added: 'It looks like 2011 is perhaps going to set perhaps a new record.'

 

 

 

The previous annual record breaker was in 2008, when nine billion dollars worth of damage was caused by the weather.

In that year only two disasters had hit by May.

The results, from the National Climactic Data Centre, date back to 1980.

Using information from insurers, state emergency-management centres and federal agencies, the centre is one of the most accurate methods of calculating the overall cost of weather related damage.

 
Fury from the air: More than 100 tornadoes cut a swathe of death and destruction through areas like Tuscaloosa in Alabama on April 29. The clean-up and rebuilding operations will last years and cost many millions

Fury from the air: More than 100 tornadoes cut a swathe of death and destruction through areas like Tuscaloosa in Alabama on April 29. The clean-up and rebuilding operations will last years and cost many millions

 

 
Aftermath: Tuscaloosa, Alabama. The state was reportedly the hardest-hit of six states devastated by tornadoes that were up to half a mile wide

Aftermath: Tuscaloosa, Alabama. The state was reportedly the hardest-hit of six states devastated by tornadoes that were up to half a mile wide

The news comes as rising floodwaters of the Mississippi River continue to threaten towns and farms between Memphis and the Gulf of Mexico, affecting up to 10 per cent of Louisiana’s onshore crude oil production.

A total of 2,264 oil wells are responsible for about 19,000 barrels of crude a day and more than 150 companies are preparing for flooding in a four-parish area in the southern part of the state.

For weeks, the Mississippi and Ohio rivers, swollen by heavy rain and melted snow, have been inundating cities and towns, flooding cropland and disrupting shipping.

The Ohio rose to 61.72 feet, a record in Cairo, Illinois, before joining the Mississippi.

The threat of that flood reaching Baton Rouge and New Orleans has the Mississippi River Commission considering opening the 125 gates of the Morganza Floodway.

 
Blocked: Hundreds of cars are seen stranded on Lake Shore Drive, Chicago. Snow caused massive disruption to travellers at the start of the year

Blocked: Hundreds of cars are seen stranded on Lake Shore Drive, Chicago. Snow caused massive disruption to travellers at the start of the year

 
Delayed response: The snowstorms that brought New York City to a standstill in February exposed the lack of an adequate contingency plan. Streets were snowed in, and thousands of homes and buildings were without power

Delayed response: The snowstorms that brought New York City to a standstill in February exposed the lack of an adequate contingency plan. Streets were snowed in, and thousands of homes and buildings were without power

Built in 1954, and only used in 1973, the floodway would release 600,000 cubic feet of water per second into central Louisiana and the Atchafalaya River, taking pressure off the Mississippi and the cities downstream.

The decision will be made if the flow at Louisiana’s Red River Landing north of Baton Rouge reaches 1.5 million cubic feet per second. The flow was at 1.46 million cubic feet per second yesterday.

The Mississippi crested earlier this week in Memphis at 47.87 feet, just under the record 48.7 feet set in 1937, and threatens to set more high-water marks before the flow splits in Louisiana, with 70 per cent remaining in its channel and 30 per cent running down the Atchafalaya.

Cities and towns on both waterways are preparing for flooding. Baton Rouge Prepares City workers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana’s capital, have placed two miles of orange tubing filled with water on top of an earth and concrete levee to raise it above the expected record 47.5-foot crest the National Weather Service says may arrive by May 22.

In Vicksburg, Mississippi, workers at the Rainbow Casino Hotel stacked sandbags to shield it from the river, while 7 feet of water washed into the entrance to Caesars Entertainment Corp.’s Harrah’s Tunica, Mississippi’s largest casino.

The flood has shut 17 of Mississippi’s 19 river-based casinos in the U.S.’s third-largest gaming-employment market, jeopardizing thousands of jobs and $13 million a month in taxes.

Flooding will slow the state’s recovery from a recession two years ago, already lagging behind the U.S.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1386580/Tornadoes-floods-storms--U-S-hit-billion-dollar-weather-disasters-year-May.html#ixzz1MFpz5B3u

May 13, 2011