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California Senator calls on NOAA restore "billion-dollar" disaster database

Adam Schiff, a Democratic Senator from California, urged Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick and acting National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration secretary on Tuesday to restore a disaster database tracking U.S. disasters worth billions of dollars.

He said that its removal prevented legislators, insurance companies and tax payers from seeing the rising cost of natural disasters as well as planning for future extreme events.

NOAA announced that it would remove the "billion dollar weather and climate catastrophes" database "in line with evolving priorities", the latest example of how the agency has ended ongoing scientific datasets.

Schiff, who represents California in the Senate, warned that the NOAA is understaffed for the hurricane season that begins on June 1. He said that 30 out of 122 National Weather Service offices lack chief meteorologists.

Why it's important

The database revealed that billion-dollar catastrophes increased from a few per annum in the 1980s, to 23 on average per year during the last four years. Climate scientists attribute this to the rise in global temperatures. The database revealed that in 2024 there were 27 disasters with losses exceeding $1 billion.

CONTEXT

As part of its efforts to boost oil, gas, and mining operations the Trump administration has acted quickly to reverse all federal spending on climate change. It also removed any regulations aimed at addressing emissions of greenhouse gases.

KEY QUOTE

In a statement, Schiff stated that the termination of this database "suggests this program was targeted" because it showed Americans how climate change is fueling more frequent weather disasters worth billions of dollars. If this is true, it's disturbing that the government would rather keep the public in darkness about climate change, hindering the country's capability to prevent and reduce the human, environmental, and economic costs of extreme weather. (Reporting and Editing by Rod Nickel.)

(source: Reuters)