We cannot keep rebuilding storm after storm. It's a tough reality, but we must relocate instead of rebuild. Fires don't always return, but Gulf and SE coastlines are uninhabitable economically, and those coastal areas need trees and marshes and nature to better reduce erosion and threats to inland communities. It's lose lose to rebuild. Relocate and restore the natural barriers
Cities in coastal areas used to have less intense issues from storms, but those areas exacerbated the problem by urbanizing more. It's time to scale down
This is known as “climate migration” and will be a growing issue in the decades ahead as most safer places don’t have the infrastructure in place to handle a massive influx of large populations.
Car culture makes this thing much worse. Set up a proper train and bus network. So ppl no need to use car and also the houses need to be closer. So ppl no need to walk too far away just to shop
when they say insurance companies are "losing money" isn't that exactly what they're for? take little from everyone when things are fine, then reimburse them when emergencies happen? what am i not understanding here?
@@alveolate The frequency, if your home is taken out on a frequent basis because of where it is located, it is becomes unsustainable to keep fixing and therefore it's better to relocate.
@@alveolateIf a large enough number of people are insured _and_ the companies predict accidents / disasters well enough to set their premium prices accurately, then _on average_ they should be taking enough money in from insurance premiums to cover the cost of loss reimbursements plus the cost of running their business. When large-scale disasters happen more frequently or unpredictably, their payouts for insurance coverage exceed what they bring in from premiums and hence they lose money.
Lmao. What end? If you really think the end has anything to do with climate. You need to educate yourself on reality. As time has gone on we are much safer then ever. We have reduced climate related deaths over 98 percent. So as things have gotten better people are becoming more afraid. Quit believing people who gain in putting fear into you
@@jacobeberhart7739You are at best, willfully ignorant. The reality is that homes and infrastructure are being destroyed faster worldwide and domestically. And it will accelerate because it’s still ‘business usual’. Enjoy your fantasy while you can.
And given the state of the coming presidential appointments, there won’t be anybody with any intelligence to handle these problems. 😑😕 Conspiracy theories will run rampant.
What problems? Please explain? There's nothing different then before with hurricanes. Hurricanes happen every year. It's normal. Sometimes we have a lot and sometimes we don't. They can make a landfall on the same place twice a year are once every 100 years. It's called nature.
"chiyina is sending trained 5G vaccines to mess with HAARP to create the hurricanes" Or something like that. And trumpers will believe it and ban tiktok 😅
@@davidmenasco5743 As shown by many many examples, the cyber'truck' is not capable as a traditional truck, not as safe for occupants as traditional trucks, not as safer other drivers on the road as traditional trucks, and has a lower build quality than most traditional trucks.
@@haloid2010 Hell, trucks themselves are sus. Real working men buy vans that they can secure their tools in. Trucks are for show-offs who don't care if their tools get stolen.
@@haloid2010 Has any actual safety testing data been released? Can you point me to it? Or is that pure supposition? Yes, the CT has been relentlessly smeared in the fossil loving social media. But those who bought them to keep, seem to like them just fine.
@@tomasmondragon883 Mostly true, as some contractors use a lock box & pickup truck while others use a van. This also depends on traffic & weather as well as the favorite here in Portland used to be the discontinued Chevy Astro [mini] Van. But the Cyber Garbage Truck is a sign of someone who doesn't do any real contracting and actually doesn't care about the environment... I use an E-150 Cargo Van a few hundred miles a year to work on my house but now have to buy a set of 87 ply truck tires as my two MAGA Motors owning neighbor slashed my tires because he claimed I "was killing the environment with that pollution factory". I can't just rent a van because I need orthopedic seating because a drunk driver broke my back...
For most of the history of the human race there has been no house insurance. People had to rebuild it themselves or with community help. That could be defined as a type of self insurance, if it breaks I fix it myself.
Where I live, I don't pay for home owners insurance he a the money I'd spend on an attorney to sue the insurance company would be enough to rebuild my house three times. Insurance companies are bigger crooks than Democrats.
@benjamincornia7311 I just say, humanity will go as far as it can. If 60 percent of us want to dissapear....well....that is a large percentage...but do remember when the Un voted to stop genocide it was 187 countries to 2. So many of the other parts of the world still want a good place....
Climate change and rising sea levels will make properties in low lying areas and coastal areas impossible to insure. Banks will be reluctant to give a mortgage for 15 or 30 years because the property may be under water. Selling properties to average buyers will become impossible in the future as banks and mortgage companies stop making loans for these properties. Coastal areas are a high risk for insurance and extreme weather like hurricanes. People will have to self insure and take the risk of loss. Condo associations are losing their insurance and if they find a new higher cost policy they will be passing on the higher costs to association members. Flooded cars from hurricanes fill the salvage lots. Insurance companies will raise rates and pass on the costs and risks to policy holders next year. Coastal properties will be confined to wealthy individuals that can buy properties with cash and self insure for losses from hurricanes or rising sea levels.
And since all ports are seaside or near the coast, what s that spell for the future of merchant shipping, which brings over 80% of imported goods into the country ? Who is going to insure those expensive capital intensive high tech structures that harbours require to operate ?
@@reuireuiop0 The likely future to which you refer may be one where imports are priced accordingly, people cannot pay the real costs, demand drops and the end of trade as we know it occurs. It is about time. Not fun for those who like growth and all the toys that trade provides. Just another nail in the systems coffin.
@@danielfaben5838 Not just toys, but a relevant share of food products, clothing and medicine are imported by shipping as well, which are going to be hard to replace. In a country full of privately owned guns, not everyone is going to be willing to pay prices that feel inflated. "Luckily" it's going to last a bit before this shit hits the ship propeller
Maiya, a very good video, as always. Keep it up! What made me cringe is that folks in Louisiana apparently don't have any natural disaster (home owner) insurance. My guess is that folks just cannot afford it. I'm a lucky person, I live in a region of middle Europe that does see severe weather, like heavy rainfalls and flooding, derechos (westerly very strong winds), and the "once in a decade" tornadoes. Ok, OK, wild-fires are an issue in the summer months, yet not in my area, and not to the extent as in California. No hurricanes here. I'm blessed. I feel so sorry for the people loosing everything.
The more people being affected, the more will - eventually and hopefully - understand that we need to adapt. It's already too late to go back, as we've passed the 1.5° C median mark earlier this month. But we can still avert humanity's home made apocalypse.
As long as there are billions of people like there are now wanting to live the U.S. upper middle class lifestyle, the Earth ecosystems will be devastated, and the change in climate will devastate human and ecological areas.
Populations are collapsing around the world due to cost of living including unaffordable home prices/rent and expensive insurance but there is much more to this. Even if the cost of living for food and shelter remained even with incomes, there are so many material things that people want that weren't available 50 years ago. Cell phones, big flat screen TVs, internet service, subscriptions and keeping up with the Jones eats up more income. The vast majority don't need 10 children to help run the farm. China is a good example as they moved from being third world rural to more city dwellers. With less people on this planet, we can handle less land.
@@benjamincornia7311 Not in the Midwest they won't. Actually, anywhere far from the oceans and intensified fire seasons. They'll just keep burning the stuff until nothing left.
@@reuireuiop0the Midwest took the bulk of the wildfire smoke. You think that coastline problems would stay in the coastline but we only got one planet buddy.
15:53 Is concrete expensive in the US or something? Where I live, houses are built out of bricks and concrete. I don't understand why that's supposedly unreasonable?
Right? Like, no matter how I look at it, it doesn't make any sense whatsoever to build a wood and drywall house in an area where there's wildfires, tornadoes, or floods. If cost is the main reason, then that makes even less sense.
@@davidhollenshead4892 Houses made of wood have materials used for insulation apart from the wood itself. Why would you think brick and concrete houses won't have insulating materials in the walls?
In some parts of the US, concrete is more common (In Florida for example many homes are brick or concrete masonry block). But every state has different building codes and lumber is cheap. 🙁
Most of FEMA's job is before the events happen doing preventive remodaling of buildings and pre-setting up with locals for evacuation methods and rescue operations
Results of climate change.......... Temperature will rise day to day . Frequent storms , cyclones, draught and unprecedented flood, rise of sea level, flooding of coastal low lands , melting of polar ice and mountain glaciers. Crop fallure leading to famines. We should reduce carbon emission drastically without delay. This is the only way to reduce global warming.
The sad thing is even if all emissions stopped today (which of course they won't, rather they're increasing year on year) , the gases already released will continue to warm our planet for over a thousand years. Also there's all this extra methane that scientists are unsure of where it is coming from, so the climate won't improve in our lifetime, or our children's, nor their children's children... best ya can do is try to enjoy the decline.
14:40 "pushing insurance companies to rapidly raise rates." If insurance is about diluting risk, why should for-profit insurance companies exist? Just pool ALL the risk and develop rational rates based on actual risk. No need to expand profit margins and charge us for Geico ads and CEO salaries on top of everything else. How silly. Let the private markets deal with boutique issues, special cases etc. In the same way that "health insurance" shouldn't be for-profit, but a surgeon or pianist insuring their hands should totally be a thing, for-profit homeowner's insurance for basic needs should be a basic good. Again...how silly we do things this way because we believe in the 'magic of markets' to fix an irrational system of incentives.
Insurance companies aren't "forced" to raise their prices, they are just taking advantadge of the climate crisis to make profits. this is how capitalism works.
That's true, but so is the other side - insurance is a business, and like all businesses exists to make a profit; if the odds of having to pay out on a policy increase, the cost of the policy must also increase in order to ensure that that the company is still making a profit on that policy. Even the most ethical insurance company is subject to that basic law of economics.
Another huge factor in the dramatic disappearance of these coastal lowlands is the fact that the Mississippi delta is no longer replenished from silt that is held back by dams, and even if it were the river's current flood controls actively prevent the replenishment of the delta which only occurs through regular flooding. So even without global warming, the delta was doomed. This is just a 1-2 punch.
The more we build, the more expensive the "storm" is in terms of damage. Just like the more people you put in a place, the more people harmed when something bad goes wrong.
Mississippi got hit by Camille, Katrina, and Ilana how tall gone leave us out. If anywhere ground zero it's Florida or Mississippi.... Katrina made land fall in mississippi and Louisiana just got some of it..
Why don't people in flooded areas just sell their homes to Aquaman? /s Yeah, too many people think the solution to these "normal" problems is to do what normal people do, simply sell their home and move somewhere else. Climate doubters and people that *say* they don't believe it is happening can be so heartless and often foolish and unthinking. I'm so grateful that PBS put out this series even if they do get donations from C. Koch. and others that are funding the opposite side in addition to donating to PBS.
11:36 self insuring is what happens after global fire season. The weather is burning, the ozone layer used to be important but now the weather is burning. The wind burns. The air burns. The water burns. The earth burns. The light is burning and I have nothing to do with it. Love you ❤❤❤❤😮😅
the story of the 3 pigs. nature will blow down or burn your house of sticks. Wooden houses in hurricane zones and dry forests? Maybe the timber industry lobbies against houses made of cinder block and concrete and with tiled roofs.
9:45 I didn't realize that insurers have been losing money in my state (CO) for most of the last decade. When insurance prices skyrocket or insurers leave then home values will drop. It may be time to cash out and look for another state soon.
I know it was only mentioned offhand, but I’d love to see an episode about the aftermath of energy extractionlot of people don’t realize how devastating oil and gas extraction can be to the land- like there was literally a hill here in Los Angeles that completely collapsed in on itself from improper extraction in the 20s
I know this will sound crazy... but I've always hated the concept of "insurance" ...... You're better off putting that payment into a savings account and using it to repair or rebuild after.... If you build right and within your cash budget, you're better off. Self-sufficiency is going to be a must for the future.
One of my many ideas for global conquest is to have the majority of large cities partially and slowly evacuated. These old cities, or even the new ones with out-dated construction schematics, are a source of Rot. Rotten air comes from the big, old cities. Sewage lines nearly , as in Rome, thousands of years old. A sewage line creates run off and the run off creates natural waterways both on terra firma and in the Subterranean realm. This offer for inclusion within the Terraforming Conferences can only be voted on after the Tristate Commissary is functional. My hope for global conquest is real. 🎉
it suprises me that they don't have their new homes up on stilts, don't they think it is going to continue it 's march north, even the old homes are elevate.
Fantastic I wonder is these aircraft may also be used in the future of bomb cyclones of the northwest? Could they intensify in the future? Have these planes flew thru storms as they Rapidly intensify? This climate change needs some idea of what is to come.
when you watch a video about climate change fucking up the country which emitts the most and trys way to little to fix it haha😭😭😭. i think many of those solutions aren‘t that good bc u have way more of a fundamental problem in generall. and your solutions won‘t fix them
This is a prime example of why more people need to get more prepared and think about "Emergency Preparedness Management" for both your home and vehicles. I am a UA-camr under my Full-Name with the same profile picture as this post with 48 videos covering 28 different category topic subjects sharing my personal knowledge and experiences with others to help others improve their overall adult lives. I've got videos on building yourself a high quality 24-72 Hour Survival Bug Out Bags, Home and Vehicle Preparedness and Readiness advice videos, several Financial Literacy advice videos, a dozen Cooking Creation Recipes videos, and more!
I believe that if you have trees cut back 50 to 100 ft. from your house and a nonstop sprinkler system for the surrounding yard and roof. Your likely to avoid having your home burn down.
Until the wind blows the embers all around, and they land on the flammable places that the hot wind just dried out. Good luck with that. What happens when they cut off the water to fight the front line... how do you wet your home?
@@holzhausholz8215 price of construction and property value has gone up a lot. Makes it more expensive to insure. Now when big storms come they are repairing over crowded 500-300k homes that are probably worth 200-100k because of location.
I'm sorry. Hang on. Dude cares about making a home better @16:40 and he driving a literal dumpster fire for a vehicle? Bwahahahaha :D Rest of the vid, great!
Yeah yeah continue to talk this s*** until it happens to you... And you better pray and hope it doesn't you better hope where you live doesn't disappear get destroyed by the foolishness
poorly done I was looking for a more tech fid and what i got was a feel good antidotal vid Thumbs down. Bty way I watch nothing done by large crop such as ABC or PBS. Both are rich run. I look for ppl doing Indy work and u are not that. In point of fact I go so far as to call u fake.
why concrete is not reasonable? it doesnt make sense. Looks like Luisiana is flood plane, just dont live there ! or live on floating home, or spend money on concrete home! you americans live in cardboard homes and complain about destruction.
We cannot keep rebuilding storm after storm. It's a tough reality, but we must relocate instead of rebuild. Fires don't always return, but Gulf and SE coastlines are uninhabitable economically, and those coastal areas need trees and marshes and nature to better reduce erosion and threats to inland communities. It's lose lose to rebuild. Relocate and restore the natural barriers
Cities in coastal areas used to have less intense issues from storms, but those areas exacerbated the problem by urbanizing more. It's time to scale down
This is known as “climate migration” and will be a growing issue in the decades ahead as most safer places don’t have the infrastructure in place to handle a massive influx of large populations.
@@trevinbeattie4888 Immigration will be a hot topic of debate in the years to come.
Car culture makes this thing much worse.
Set up a proper train and bus network.
So ppl no need to use car and also the houses need to be closer. So ppl no need to walk too far away just to shop
The insurance companies certainly understand that, which is why they are pulling out of Florida.
Please forgive my frankness: FUCK OLIGARCHY!!! 😢
well said.
Oilarchy.
when they say insurance companies are "losing money" isn't that exactly what they're for? take little from everyone when things are fine, then reimburse them when emergencies happen? what am i not understanding here?
@@alveolate The frequency, if your home is taken out on a frequent basis because of where it is located, it is becomes unsustainable to keep fixing and therefore it's better to relocate.
@@alveolateIf a large enough number of people are insured _and_ the companies predict accidents / disasters well enough to set their premium prices accurately, then _on average_ they should be taking enough money in from insurance premiums to cover the cost of loss reimbursements plus the cost of running their business. When large-scale disasters happen more frequently or unpredictably, their payouts for insurance coverage exceed what they bring in from premiums and hence they lose money.
I'm glad you're documenting our end so that alien investigators will know what happened and that lots of people cared
I think CO2 will kill all humans, I am really smart
They need to come out from the ocean depths first ❤❤❤
Lmao. What end? If you really think the end has anything to do with climate. You need to educate yourself on reality. As time has gone on we are much safer then ever. We have reduced climate related deaths over 98 percent. So as things have gotten better people are becoming more afraid. Quit believing people who gain in putting fear into you
@@jacobeberhart7739You are at best, willfully ignorant. The reality is that homes and infrastructure are being destroyed faster worldwide and domestically. And it will accelerate because it’s still ‘business usual’. Enjoy your fantasy while you can.
🎶We didn't light it but we tried to fight it🎶
And given the state of the coming presidential appointments, there won’t be anybody with any intelligence to handle these problems. 😑😕 Conspiracy theories will run rampant.
I see they already are.
If you don't test for the hurricanes, then they cannot hurt you!
What problems? Please explain? There's nothing different then before with hurricanes. Hurricanes happen every year. It's normal. Sometimes we have a lot and sometimes we don't. They can make a landfall on the same place twice a year are once every 100 years. It's called nature.
"chiyina is sending trained 5G vaccines to mess with HAARP to create the hurricanes"
Or something like that. And trumpers will believe it and ban tiktok 😅
its all a joke now
This is such a fantastic series. Thank you for your important work.
This is such a wonderful channel! The entire world will be grappling with these issues so it's past time to get ready.
16:37 any credibility this guy had evaporated the second I saw his "truck".
So what, people who pay extra upfront for a longer term savings are not credible?
@@davidmenasco5743 As shown by many many examples, the cyber'truck' is not capable as a traditional truck, not as safe for occupants as traditional trucks, not as safer other drivers on the road as traditional trucks, and has a lower build quality than most traditional trucks.
@@haloid2010 Hell, trucks themselves are sus. Real working men buy vans that they can secure their tools in. Trucks are for show-offs who don't care if their tools get stolen.
@@haloid2010 Has any actual safety testing data been released? Can you point me to it? Or is that pure supposition?
Yes, the CT has been relentlessly smeared in the fossil loving social media. But those who bought them to keep, seem to like them just fine.
@@tomasmondragon883 Mostly true, as some contractors use a lock box & pickup truck while others use a van. This also depends on traffic & weather as well as the favorite here in Portland used to be the discontinued Chevy Astro [mini] Van. But the Cyber Garbage Truck is a sign of someone who doesn't do any real contracting and actually doesn't care about the environment...
I use an E-150 Cargo Van a few hundred miles a year to work on my house but now have to buy a set of 87 ply truck tires as my two MAGA Motors owning neighbor slashed my tires because he claimed I "was killing the environment with that pollution factory". I can't just rent a van because I need orthopedic seating because a drunk driver broke my back...
…”self insured” sounds like an industry/consultant term. These people are not insured. Self insurance is impossible by definition
"Corporate would like you to tell the difference between those two insurance policies"
In the world where home without insurance was impossible, I think it is just new way to describe it.
For most of the history of the human race there has been no house insurance. People had to rebuild it themselves or with community help.
That could be defined as a type of self insurance, if it breaks I fix it myself.
Where I live, I don't pay for home owners insurance he a the money I'd spend on an attorney to sue the insurance company would be enough to rebuild my house three times. Insurance companies are bigger crooks than Democrats.
@jimholmes2555 if you feel the same about medical insurance, boy do I have a policy proposal for you
Great video, thank you for all the energy and effort in highlighting the key factors people need to come to terms with
The underground utilities such as water, and sewer become infiltrated before the water is at the door step.
Excellent point, that most people don’t think about.
Didn't Trump want to nuke the hurricanes?
I thought a wall would work
Yes. Honestly, after the election, I’m convinced that the species doesn’t deserve a better world.
I can't believe we have to live and die through a repeat of those years omg
@benjamincornia7311 I just say, humanity will go as far as it can. If 60 percent of us want to dissapear....well....that is a large percentage...but do remember when the Un voted to stop genocide it was 187 countries to 2. So many of the other parts of the world still want a good place....
Lol yes he did 😂
Its nice that they do all this research, but just around me the big home builders are building the cheapest houses with none of these advancements.
Climate change and rising sea levels will make properties in low lying areas and coastal areas impossible to insure. Banks will be reluctant to give a mortgage for 15 or 30 years because the property may be under water. Selling properties to average buyers will become impossible in the future as banks and mortgage companies stop making loans for these properties. Coastal areas are a high risk for insurance and extreme weather like hurricanes. People will have to self insure and take the risk of loss. Condo associations are losing their insurance and if they find a new higher cost policy they will be passing on the higher costs to association members. Flooded cars from hurricanes fill the salvage lots. Insurance companies will raise rates and pass on the costs and risks to policy holders next year. Coastal properties will be confined to wealthy individuals that can buy properties with cash and self insure for losses from hurricanes or rising sea levels.
And since all ports are seaside or near the coast, what s that spell for the future of merchant shipping, which brings over 80% of imported goods into the country ?
Who is going to insure those expensive capital intensive high tech structures that harbours require to operate ?
@@reuireuiop0 The likely future to which you refer may be one where imports are priced accordingly, people cannot pay the real costs, demand drops and the end of trade as we know it occurs. It is about time. Not fun for those who like growth and all the toys that trade provides. Just another nail in the systems coffin.
@@danielfaben5838 Not just toys, but a relevant share of food products, clothing and medicine are imported by shipping as well, which are going to be hard to replace.
In a country full of privately owned guns, not everyone is going to be willing to pay prices that feel inflated. "Luckily" it's going to last a bit before this shit hits the ship propeller
Maiya, a very good video, as always. Keep it up!
What made me cringe is that folks in Louisiana apparently don't have any natural disaster (home owner) insurance. My guess is that folks just cannot afford it. I'm a lucky person, I live in a region of middle Europe that does see severe weather, like heavy rainfalls and flooding, derechos (westerly very strong winds), and the "once in a decade" tornadoes. Ok, OK, wild-fires are an issue in the summer months, yet not in my area, and not to the extent as in California. No hurricanes here. I'm blessed. I feel so sorry for the people loosing everything.
The more people being affected, the more will - eventually and hopefully - understand that we need to adapt. It's already too late to go back, as we've passed the 1.5° C median mark earlier this month. But we can still avert humanity's home made apocalypse.
If you understand anthropogenic mass extinction, you'll realize why we will not stop destroying the entire biosphere until we too are destroyed.
Nah, they'll just find a new scapegoat to blame.
Adapt? That sounds like a lose of profits and we can't have that now can we?
As long as there are billions of people like there are now wanting to live the U.S. upper middle class lifestyle, the Earth ecosystems will be devastated, and the change in climate will devastate human and ecological areas.
Somehow, "bumpy" doesn't give me a sense of what those flights must feel like.
Maiya is so pretty and intelligent lmao I love watching her pieces.
8:59 "impacting them"
The top hit of 2047: "Bunker living in what used to be paradise"
You should do a Colab with PBS Eons.. especially one of their long "can you survive x" and explore Paleo climate.
Populations are collapsing around the world due to cost of living including unaffordable home prices/rent and expensive insurance but there is much more to this. Even if the cost of living for food and shelter remained even with incomes, there are so many material things that people want that weren't available 50 years ago. Cell phones, big flat screen TVs, internet service, subscriptions and keeping up with the Jones eats up more income.
The vast majority don't need 10 children to help run the farm. China is a good example as they moved from being third world rural to more city dwellers.
With less people on this planet, we can handle less land.
Better building codes are one thing that saves homes from utter destruction.
By making housing impossible to afford.
I'm learning so much through this series. Thanks for sharing!
I knew immediately from the video still that this was my home state.
I could guess too that its probably southern usa xD
Maybe when we lose New Orleans Americans will take climate change seriously.
@@benjamincornia7311
Not in the Midwest they won't. Actually, anywhere far from the oceans and intensified fire seasons.
They'll just keep burning the stuff until nothing left.
@@benjamincornia7311too late by then. I can’t believe they need to see their homes underwater first before believing.
@@reuireuiop0the Midwest took the bulk of the wildfire smoke. You think that coastline problems would stay in the coastline but we only got one planet buddy.
That guy really hit them with the "stick structures"
15:53 Is concrete expensive in the US or something? Where I live, houses are built out of bricks and concrete. I don't understand why that's supposedly unreasonable?
Right? Like, no matter how I look at it, it doesn't make any sense whatsoever to build a wood and drywall house in an area where there's wildfires, tornadoes, or floods.
If cost is the main reason, then that makes even less sense.
The issue is mostly due to the poor insulation of brick & concrete houses as you have to keep the brick and / or concrete above freezing here...
@@davidhollenshead4892 Houses made of wood have materials used for insulation apart from the wood itself. Why would you think brick and concrete houses won't have insulating materials in the walls?
In some parts of the US, concrete is more common (In Florida for example many homes are brick or concrete masonry block). But every state has different building codes and lumber is cheap. 🙁
Hope this isn't one of the last PBS I get to watch.
Most of FEMA's job is before the events happen doing preventive remodaling of buildings and pre-setting up with locals for evacuation methods and rescue operations
Thank you for your reporting.
Lmfao the cybertruck
Underwriters Laboratories does testing like this, but more for fire safety. Totally cool testing!
Most necessary work, Salute!
thanks for what you do. i listen all your emissions, hi from Canada
Such an excellent series!
Results of climate change.......... Temperature will rise day to day . Frequent storms , cyclones, draught and unprecedented flood, rise of sea level, flooding of coastal low lands , melting of polar ice
and mountain glaciers. Crop fallure leading to famines.
We should reduce carbon emission drastically without delay. This is the only way to reduce global warming.
The sad thing is even if all emissions stopped today (which of course they won't, rather they're increasing year on year) , the gases already released will continue to warm our planet for over a thousand years. Also there's all this extra methane that scientists are unsure of where it is coming from, so the climate won't improve in our lifetime, or our children's, nor their children's children... best ya can do is try to enjoy the decline.
14:40 "pushing insurance companies to rapidly raise rates." If insurance is about diluting risk, why should for-profit insurance companies exist?
Just pool ALL the risk and develop rational rates based on actual risk. No need to expand profit margins and charge us for Geico ads and CEO salaries on top of everything else. How silly.
Let the private markets deal with boutique issues, special cases etc. In the same way that "health insurance" shouldn't be for-profit, but a surgeon or pianist insuring their hands should totally be a thing, for-profit homeowner's insurance for basic needs should be a basic good. Again...how silly we do things this way because we believe in the 'magic of markets' to fix an irrational system of incentives.
Insurance companies aren't "forced" to raise their prices, they are just taking advantadge of the climate crisis to make profits. this is how capitalism works.
That's true, but so is the other side - insurance is a business, and like all businesses exists to make a profit; if the odds of having to pay out on a policy increase, the cost of the policy must also increase in order to ensure that that the company is still making a profit on that policy. Even the most ethical insurance company is subject to that basic law of economics.
@@alexv3357 "ethical insurance company" 😂😂 yeah, i dont care about businesses skrrrt
thanks PBS
Time is not on our side. By 2030 many places in the world will be uninhabitable. We're toast.
2025 bing, 2026 bong, 2027 bang, 2028 bung, 2029 beng
2030 pfuff
🔮🙏💫🌎
We had decades to do something about it, and chose not too
They're called earthships. We already know what to do
We fully deserved all of that due to our choices over the last 250.
Another huge factor in the dramatic disappearance of these coastal lowlands is the fact that the Mississippi delta is no longer replenished from silt that is held back by dams, and even if it were the river's current flood controls actively prevent the replenishment of the delta which only occurs through regular flooding. So even without global warming, the delta was doomed. This is just a 1-2 punch.
The more we build, the more expensive the "storm" is in terms of damage. Just like the more people you put in a place, the more people harmed when something bad goes wrong.
The hurricane hunters home was in mississippi
Mississippi got hit by Camille, Katrina, and Ilana how tall gone leave us out. If anywhere ground zero it's Florida or Mississippi.... Katrina made land fall in mississippi and Louisiana just got some of it..
Louisiana is sinking, I think that is a big part of the story.
Do not worry, the rich will find a use for all this abandoned land.
Snorkelling.
What happens to the parachute capsules when they reach the ocean? Are they collected or is it just litter
Why don't people in flooded areas just sell their homes to Aquaman? /s Yeah, too many people think the solution to these "normal" problems is to do what normal people do, simply sell their home and move somewhere else. Climate doubters and people that *say* they don't believe it is happening can be so heartless and often foolish and unthinking.
I'm so grateful that PBS put out this series even if they do get donations from C. Koch. and others that are funding the opposite side in addition to donating to PBS.
But more beachfront property!
11:36 self insuring is what happens after global fire season. The weather is burning, the ozone layer used to be important but now the weather is burning. The wind burns. The air burns. The water burns. The earth burns. The light is burning and I have nothing to do with it. Love you ❤❤❤❤😮😅
the story of the 3 pigs. nature will blow down or burn your house of sticks. Wooden houses in hurricane zones and dry forests? Maybe the timber industry lobbies against houses made of cinder block and concrete and with tiled roofs.
Cinder Block was banned in the US decades ago as it was made from highly toxic incinerator ash...
9:45 I didn't realize that insurers have been losing money in my state (CO) for most of the last decade. When insurance prices skyrocket or insurers leave then home values will drop. It may be time to cash out and look for another state soon.
I know it was only mentioned offhand, but I’d love to see an episode about the aftermath of energy extractionlot of people don’t realize how devastating oil and gas extraction can be to the land- like there was literally a hill here in Los Angeles that completely collapsed in on itself from improper extraction in the 20s
The land, Arthur. The Land!
I know this will sound crazy... but I've always hated the concept of "insurance" ...... You're better off putting that payment into a savings account and using it to repair or rebuild after.... If you build right and within your cash budget, you're better off. Self-sufficiency is going to be a must for the future.
Sound healing for the world at the Tristate H.E.M.I. Platform.
-Commish
10:00 what’s that in terms of population? 1/15?
One of my many ideas for global conquest is to have the majority of large cities partially and slowly evacuated. These old cities, or even the new ones with out-dated construction schematics, are a source of Rot. Rotten air comes from the big, old cities. Sewage lines nearly , as in Rome, thousands of years old. A sewage line creates run off and the run off creates natural waterways both on terra firma and in the Subterranean realm.
This offer for inclusion within the Terraforming Conferences can only be voted on after the Tristate Commissary is functional. My hope for global conquest is real. 🎉
I lost all respect for this as soon as you intentionally decided to interview someone using a cybertruck.
If that 1st guy is na ... So am I 😂
But how can I get one of those Weathered hats tho 👀
Maiya, I have watched a number of your videos. On a personal level, I wonder how you feel, day to day, like me…
I dunno if I can trust a company to give my house a gold rating, when they cant even get a truck that can drive through a light rain without trouble.
The Cyber Garbage Truck by MAGA Motors is the sign of a "contractor"who does no actual contracting and doesn't care about the environment...
Great vid guys, but that guy in the wheelchair, how does he get up the stairs, both houses have stairs, sorry I'm scratching my head over it🤔
The old house has an elevator attached to the deck the new house has a ramp under the carport
@mattg7952 thank you😀👍
it suprises me that they don't have their new homes up on stilts, don't they think it is going to continue it 's march north, even the old homes are elevate.
Don’t worry guys, you can just sell your house to aquaman like ben shapiro said
We can thank Big Oil for this. If our government was worth a damn, Big Oil would be paying for all the devastation and its clean up.
The title is disingenuous to the actual topic. This is literally just a video about people dealing with storms.
This title acts like there is no such thing as Waterworld. Just be sure to save your tomato plants.
Fantastic I wonder is these aircraft may also be used in the future of bomb cyclones of the northwest? Could they intensify in the future? Have these planes flew thru storms as they Rapidly intensify? This climate change needs some idea of what is to come.
when you watch a video about climate change fucking up the country which emitts the most and trys way to little to fix it haha😭😭😭. i think many of those solutions aren‘t that good bc u have way more of a fundamental problem in generall. and your solutions won‘t fix them
Exactly thank you at this point silly humans are just being pessimistic 😮😢
This is a prime example of why more people need to get more prepared and think about "Emergency Preparedness Management" for both your home and vehicles. I am a UA-camr under my Full-Name with the same profile picture as this post with 48 videos covering 28 different category topic subjects sharing my personal knowledge and experiences with others to help others improve their overall adult lives. I've got videos on building yourself a high quality 24-72 Hour Survival Bug Out Bags, Home and Vehicle Preparedness and Readiness advice videos, several Financial Literacy advice videos, a dozen Cooking Creation Recipes videos, and more!
UA-cam doesn't want me to watch this, so thumbs down. FTS!
Yeah, using an expert who drives a cybertruck that can't work properly in a light rain makes that expert lose all credibility.
everything gonna be a joke now
I believe that if you have trees cut back 50 to 100 ft. from your house and a nonstop sprinkler system for the surrounding yard and roof. Your likely to avoid having your home burn down.
Until the wind blows the embers all around, and they land on the flammable places that the hot wind just dried out. Good luck with that. What happens when they cut off the water to fight the front line... how do you wet your home?
@@cynthiamontgomery1192Personally I’m working on water tanks for potable water, non-potable water, and fire.
It won't... Population is about to start... falling.
And if it doesn't. Nature and human nature will make sure it does 😅
Creating myths for the future, like the lost city of Atlantis.
Some of it has to do with inflation
And the price of eggs?
A lot of it, actually. The insurance crisis pressures the prices up.
@@holzhausholz8215 price of construction and property value has gone up a lot. Makes it more expensive to insure. Now when big storms come they are repairing over crowded 500-300k homes that are probably worth 200-100k because of location.
do you have children? yes or no, otherwise can't take you serious
I'm sorry. Hang on. Dude cares about making a home better @16:40 and he driving a literal dumpster fire for a vehicle? Bwahahahaha :D Rest of the vid, great!
I'm judging the host for complimenting the Rhodesian Wankpanzer
Move to Mar a Largo
You might just learn what the Earth has been doing millions of times over it's 4.5 billion year history.
In the past climate change wasn't exacerbated by humans, now it is.
@@jazzypoo7960 Old Jim hadn't thought about that, had he?
@@ianhamilton3113 I wonder why UA-cam's removing my comments?
life goes on....get over it!!!
Yeah yeah continue to talk this s*** until it happens to you... And you better pray and hope it doesn't you better hope where you live doesn't disappear get destroyed by the foolishness
poorly done I was looking for a more tech fid and what i got was a feel good antidotal vid Thumbs down. Bty way I watch nothing done by large crop such as ABC or PBS. Both are rich run. I look for ppl doing Indy work and u are not that. In point of fact I go so far as to call u fake.
PBS will blame Trump.
So will you. Give it time.
@@JacobTheGM💯
Nope, I blame the Florida Supreme Court that 25 years ago, gave us war monger, climate change denying Bush instead of Gore, an environmentalist.
You'll have your don't look up moment with the gop climate policy. It'll be to late by then.
As they should, it’s not Trump’s fault but we all know he doesn’t give a shit and he’ll do nothing to fix any of it.
why concrete is not reasonable? it doesnt make sense. Looks like Luisiana is flood plane, just dont live there ! or live on floating home, or spend money on concrete home! you americans live in cardboard homes and complain about destruction.
Because concrete is useless in tension and crumbles apart very easily. It doesn't handle extreme weather events that well either.
@@guyman1570 maybe tell it to military to start using wood for bunkers