Yet They Keep Being
Rebuilt Again
Katherine Bagley, Yale Environment 360
The U.S. National Flood
Insurance Program, which holds policies for more than 5 million homes, is $23
billion in debt after a string of natural disasters this century. As climate
change further strains the program, analysts say it is time to shift its focus
from rebuilding to mitigating risk.
More than 2,100 properties across
the U.S. enrolled in the National Flood Insurance Program have flooded and been
rebuilt more than 10 times since 1978, according to a new analysis
of insurance data by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC).
One home in Batchelor, Louisiana
has flooded 40 times over the past four decades, receiving $428,379 in
insurance payments.
More than 30,000 properties in the
program, run by the Federal Emergency Management Agency, have flooded multiple
times over the years.
Those homes, known as “severe
repetitive loss properties,” make up just 0.6 percent of federal flood
insurance policies. But they account for 10.6 percent of the program’s claims —
totaling $5.5 billion in payments.
Six U.S. states have experienced
deadly flooding in the last 15 months, including Texas, South Carolina, and, most
recently, Louisiana.
Scientists and policy experts warn
that as seas continue to rise and extreme weather becomes more frequent as a
result of climate change, more properties will flood more often, causing
further strain on an already financially stressed system.
“The way we have dealt with
properties that are at a high risk of flooding is massively expensive, of
limited utility at reducing the nation’s risk from flood damages, and is
unworkable as a solution in the face of sea level rise and rising risk of
flooding due to climate change,” said Rob Moore, a flood policy analyst at the
NRDC, which obtained the records from FEMA using a Freedom of Information Act
request.
Of the 30,000 homes analyzed by
the NRDC, the average cumulative payout per property as a result of repeated
flooding was $181,444. Nearly half of these repetitive loss properties have
been paid more in flood insurance money than their houses are worth, the NRDC
found.
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