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“The future,” Canadian sci-fi novelist William Gibson once wrote, “is already here. It’s just not very evenly distributed.” In Los Angeles, where raging wildfires have already killed at least 24 people, burned thousands of homes, and caused upward of $100 billion in damage, we’re getting an unwelcome preview of what our climate-changed future will look like. It’s one where all the money in the world can’t always save or protect you, but those without means will still suffer the most.
We are not even close to ready for it. Witness the attempts by bad-faith actors on the right — including the president-elect — to target everything from DEI (diversity, equity, and inclusion) and environmental regulations to local government officials and even sign language interpreters (I wish I was kidding) during a fire that fire officials have said repeatedly couldn’t be stopped. Scapegoating like this might be politically convenient, but it does nothing to address the real issue that will keep rearing its head in ever more catastrophic ways.
That’s because, of course — of COURSE — this is a story about climate change. As Bloomberg’s Lauren Rosenthal and Brian Sullivan noted in a recent piece, the ever-rising levels of heat in our oceans may have caused the jet stream to wander off its normal track, leaving a high-pressure ridge stuck over southern California for even longer stretches than normal. That means more heat, less moisture and ideal fire conditions. “One stubborn high-pressure ridge has blocked moisture from reaching Southern California for months,” Rosenthal and Sullivan wrote, “creating a virtual force field that has led to dry conditions.”
The sheer ferocity of the Los Angeles fires reminded West Kelowna fire chief Jason Brolund of those his crews battled in August 2023. “We have first-hand experience with the force of wildfire, but what’s happening there is on a scale that really is almost too difficult to fathom,” he told Castanet. “They’re fighting a fire in essentially what amounts to a hurricane.” And make no mistake: California is the future. “We watch California very closely,” Brolund says. “They are in many ways probably five to 10 years ahead of us, not only in their strategies and tactics and the way that they approach wildfire, but also in the risk and what they’re facing.”
There’s no point in trying to convince climate skeptics of the urgency here. They won’t listen to us. Their insurance companies, on the other hand, might just drive the point home. California’s insurance market has been shielded from the reality change, with ratepayers in lower-risk areas effectively subsidizing costs for higher-risk homes. Right now, California is the only state in the country that doesn’t allow insurance companies to use so-called “catastrophe models” to set prices. It also prevents companies from factoring in the cost of reinsurance, which is essentially the insurance they have on their own policies and the possibility of major disaster-related payouts.
As a result, insurers have been pulling out of the state in droves, a trend that’s almost certain to increase going forward. It’s not just happening in California, either. In hurricane-ravaged Florida, for example, insurers have been taking it in the teeth for years, with 16 becoming insolvent since 2017 and a further 16 deciding not to write policies there any more. "If we're going to have a solvent insurance market in the country,” California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara told NPR, “insurance can no longer be an afterthought in the national and global conversations around climate change. Insurance has to be at the forefront."
As the Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL) noted in a 2024 report, climate events are happening all across America — and driving up insurance prices everywhere. “As insurers seek to limit their exposure to climate-induced weather events like hurricanes and wildfires,” they wrote, “insurance premium increases and policy non-renewals have become a summer norm in the United States (US), making housing more unaffordable in the process.”
This isn’t just about individual policies or homeowners, either. Climate-driven disasters and their impact on the insurance industry could trigger a broader financial crisis, one that begins — as the last one did — in the housing market. “As more American homeowners become unable to afford insurance,” the CIEL report notes, “they are more likely to default on their mortgages. Increased rates of home mortgage defaults were a key factor in the 2008 financial crisis, and large numbers of defaults could have ripple effects throughout the economy.”
At some point, whether conservative politicians and ideologues like it or not, the government and taxpayers will have to pay the price on carbon emissions. The real question is whether they do it up front to help mitigate the problem or through cleanup costs — and how high those costs ends up being.
Comments
Excellent article. I just wish this information could reach a broader audience.
Hahaha, come on nobody wants to pay for any of this, or elect politicians who will tell anything close to the truth about it. We'll do what we always. Punch down and blame minorities someway/anyway and start and fight wars. That's the only things all of humanity has ever done in these situations.
It's certainly frustrating to see events like Australia burning down - twice - not moving the needle much; and this, of course, will only move the needle a few degrees more. It's so slow, reality sinking in.
But it does sink in. As the saying goes, you overestimate what you can do in a year, underestimate what you can do in ten years. If you think back to 2015, even the America Democrats were not all that interested in climate projects; Obama had no priority for them. Biden's IRA is the biggest climate effort in history. And Trump will have trouble undoing all that lovely federal money in red states.
Up here, the main face of petrostate-Canada has just firmly identified herself as something separate from all other Canadians; whatever the effect of that in the next few weeks, the long-term effect is to help oil&gas look un-Canadian. Have some cheer, folks.
pretty good article, but it misses the point on so many levels.
for one, the elephant in the room is the failure of governments worldwide to address climate change as they jetset around the world time and time again with no real accomplishments.
offsetting emissions by buying carbon credits and introducing carbon tax does NOTHING when these same governments constantly INCREASE oil coal LNG and manufacturing of plastics and toxic forever chemicals that has now contaminated every living thing, every body of water and the air we breathe.
its not rocket science, its quite simple. declare war on man made destuction of the world, police corporate bodies who are given free passes and billions in taxpayer money to do these things.
The costs get handed down to Canadians and citizens of the world in forms of high prices for food housing and energy, handed down in super inflated insurance costs, for which for decades insurance companies profited BILLIONS, maybe even trillions up until about 10 years ago since the tipping point of the world saying "no more, I can give no more"
so are we looking for answer to address these problems? I don't think you nor government and corporations can handle the truth. Because the ONLY way out of this is to NATIONALISE Canada, kick out the welfare-dependent corporations who's only goal is profit at the cost to the world.
but that will never happen, the world will go down in flames, literally, bc Canadian governments and most of the free world are now subjugated by deep state zionists who's goal is the complete annihilation of a free and democratic healthy society.
One only needs to look to China, in which the only thing communist is the name of the political party, China IS a nationalist nation in which it looks after its people where there is no shortage of affordable housing, cheap energy for heating, and cheap and healthy food, a health care system in which I personally got an MRI CT scan, and blood tests done in one day for a cost of $400. People don't fear their government or the police, bc with only a million or so politicians governing 3 billion citizens, any tyranny can be snuffed out with a protest and coming together without repercussions we are witnessing of the Convoy truckers here in Canada. China is one of the leaders of shifting, in breakneck speeds, to green zero emissions energy and transportation.
What does Canada and USA governments do?< place a 100% tariff on Chinese EV's and soon solar and wind equipment, while Zionists Polieve and Donald Duck Trump deny delay depose the destruction of the natural world at the hands of corporate man, which legally, funny enough, is considered a person, though a person above the laws of natural man.
anyone who arbitrarily denies my statements about china being free and not affraid of government only needs to watch this video, in which truly there are no government "laws" making everything illegal, making people fear the police and their government, the people are more than capable of governing themselves.
some things to note in this video is the impressive driving in which truly there are no laws [other than common law in which there must be a victim] and people on electric bikes carying their kids with NO helmets< try this in Canada and people will have their children seized and license revoked, ruining their lives and ability to work and travel and live freely
https://rumble.com/v2nox1f-china-rush-hour-via-common-law.html
I stopped reading at the word "Zionist," followed by praise of totalinarianism in China. This is goulash logic. A mess.
I agree about the need to nationalize. We've been subject to the will of corporations for far too long, and look where it's gotten us.