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The Conversation
The Conversation
Environment
Wanyun Shao, Associate Professor of Geography, University of Alabama

Coastal cities’ growing hurricane vulnerability is fed by both climate change and unbridled population growth

Many hurricane-prone Gulf Coast communities, like Fort Myers, Fla., have grown quickly in recent years. AP Photo/Steve Helber

Warm water in the Atlantic Ocean and Gulf of Mexico can fuel powerful hurricanes, but how destructive a storm becomes isn’t just about the climate and weather – it also depends on the people and property in harm’s way.

In many coastal cities, fast population growth has left more people living in areas at high risk of flooding.

I am a geographer who studies the human dimensions of climate change and natural disasters. My research and mapping with colleagues shows that socially vulnerable communities – those least able to prepare for disasters or recover afterward – tend to be concentrated in areas that are more susceptible to flooding, particularly on the Gulf Coast.

Larger, vulnerable populations

Nearly 40% of the U.S. population lives in a coastal county today. Many of these areas are increasingly exposed to disasters, including hurricanes and high tide flooding that has been worsened by sea level rise.

The Gulf of Mexico region, in particular, is prone to climate change-induced concurrent disasters – when multiple disasters strike at once. For example, when Hurricane Beryl hit Texas in July 2024, 3 million homes and businesses lost power for several days in the middle of searing summer heat – in addition to dealing with heavy rain and flooding.

To further complicate matters, more than one-fifth of the population in Harris County, home to Houston, is considered socially vulnerable, meaning people who are likely more susceptible to harm from extreme weather.

New Orleans, another city with high social vulnerability, was under a hurricane watch and expecting power outages as Hurricane Francine headed for landfall in September 2024.

A car with is trunk lifted is stranded in floodwater up to its window with a flooded highway overpass in the background. Water flows along the pavement like rivers.
A vehicle is left abandoned in floodwater on a highway after Hurricane Beryl swept through Houston on July 8, 2024. Houston was also in the midst of a heat wave. Brandon Bell/Getty Images

Socially vulnerable populations in the U.S. include many older adults, people with disabilities, people living in poverty, mobile home dwellers and other marginalized groups. Often, they don’t have the resources or the physical ability to prepare for a storm, or the means to rebuild afterward.

Several cities along the Gulf Coast – including Houston; New Orleans; Mobile, Alabama; and Tampa, Florida – have large socially vulnerable populations that are at high risk from hurricane damage. In many of these cities, patterns of land development and political decisions have elevated the potential for harm.

A map of Houston showing the highest flood risk areas.
A map of Houston showing the highest flood-risk areas. Hemal Dey/University of Alabama. First published in Journal of Geovisualization and Spatial Analysis, 8, 19, 2024 by Springer Nature, CC BY-ND
A map of Houston showing areas with high social vulnerability
Houston’s social vulnerability map overlaps with the city’s highest flood-risk zones. Hemal Dey/University of Alabama. First published in Journal of Geovisualization and Spatial Analysis, 8, 19, 2024 by Springer Nature, CC BY-ND

Unbridled urban sprawl

Houston offers a case study in the challenges created by unbridled urban sprawl in coastal cities.

Harris County grew by one-third from 2000 to 2023, adding 1.3 million residents to become the third-most-populous county in the U.S. The economic boom accompanying that population growth brought jobs to the county, but not all of those jobs pay well. Harris County’s poverty rate is 16.5%, well above the national average of 11.5%.

In the wake of Hurricane Harvey’s widespread flood damage in 2017, a heated debate ensued. Many observers pointed out a thorny reality: Houston was built on a swamp. The laissez-faire mentality typical of Texas politics that prioritizes not intervening in growth has further contributed to unbridled urban sprawl, turning wetland to concrete land. With wetlands simply paved over, heavy rain couldn’t be easily absorbed, making new neighborhoods extremely vulnerable to flooding.

A person holds onto a spot sign post as he tries to wade through a waist-deep water in a flooded neighborhood of homes and pavement.
Remnants of Hurricane Harvey dumped dozens of inches of rain on the Houston area. With so much of the city’s land paved over, roads turned into rivers. Joe Raedle/Getty Images

Preliminary research by my research group, which focuses on risk decision-making finds that, among all land use and land cover types in Harris County, developed land has increased fastest, rising from 35% of the county’s land in 2000 to 50% in 2020.

Harvey was a vivid example of the importance of planning for storm water in urban development. Yet, as the storm’s devastation fades in the collective memory, more people are moving to Houston.

With such high concentrations of people and infrastructure in the coastal region, more people are in harm’s way. More people means that when a disaster strikes, the impact can be much larger than it was just a few decades ago.

Preparing for future disasters

Coastal communities can’t afford to wait for a disaster’s wake-up call to invest in protecting themselves. To prepare for future disasters, I believe they need to rethink urban development with climate change in mind.

A woman walks out of mobile home surrounded by muddy flood water knee-deep.
A mobile home resident in Harris County deals with flooding from the San Jacinto River during one of several flooding events in 2024 in the Houston area. AP Photo/Juan Lozano

Increasing resilience includes improving flood control infrastructure and enhancing emergency response capabilities with worsening storms in mind. It also involves adopting zoning rules that limit building in flood-prone areas. And it may even involve managed retreat – using buyouts to move some communities to safer ground.

Public education campaigns are also important to raise awareness of disaster risks. Accurate flood risk maps, for example, can motivate people to buy insurance, choose their locations more carefully and prepare their homes for the local risks. Successful awareness campaigns often partner with grassroots organizations to extend community networks and reach their vulnerable populations to help them prepare.

The Conversation

Wanyun Shao receives funding from National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration through the Cooperative Institute for Research to Operations in Hydrology.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

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