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contributor authorShalini Mohleji
contributor authorRoger Pielke Jr.
date accessioned2017-05-08T22:07:17Z
date available2017-05-08T22:07:17Z
date copyrightNovember 2014
date issued2014
identifier other29674930.pdf
identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl/handle/yetl/71749
description abstractIn recent years, claims have been made in venues including the authoritative reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and in testimony before the U.S. Congress that economic losses from weather events have been increasing beyond that which can be explained by societal change, based on loss data from the reinsurance industry and aggregated since 1980 at the global level. Such claims imply a contradiction with a large set of peer-reviewed studies focused on regional losses, typically over a much longer time period, which concludes that loss trends are explained entirely by societal change. To address this implied mismatch, this study disaggregates global losses from a widely utilized reinsurance data set into regional components and compares this disaggregation directly to the findings from the literature at the regional scale, most of which reach back much further in time. The study finds that global losses increased at a rate of
publisherAmerican Society of Civil Engineers
titleReconciliation of Trends in Global and Regional Economic Losses from Weather Events: 1980–2008
typeJournal Paper
journal volume15
journal issue4
journal titleNatural Hazards Review
identifier doi10.1061/(ASCE)NH.1527-6996.0000141
treeNatural Hazards Review:;2014:;Volume ( 015 ):;issue: 004
contenttypeFulltext


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