Costliest Hurricane
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Costliest Hurricane
now that katrina is the costliest hurricane the only way a hurricane can beat Katrina's record is for it to hit a city bigger than NO such as Houston(close call by Rita),NYC,and Miami
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Matt-hurricanewatcher
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Anonymous
Matt-hurricanewatcher wrote:I heard a cat5 into Miami would be 80 billion. So it would not do as much damage as Katrina did. It would take a Major hurricane into New york to beat Katrina.
No...the 1926 hurricane (150 mph) would have caused 80-100 billion dollars. Think about a Category 5...175 mph...into downtown Miami, then maintaining Category 3 intensity across Florida...then bombing to 180 mph in the Gulf of Mexico before going straight into New Orleans from the Southeast. Thats a 300-400 billion dollar storm.
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superfly
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Re: Costliest Hurricane
f5 wrote:now that katrina is the costliest hurricane the only way a hurricane can beat Katrina's record is for it to hit a city bigger than NO such as Houston(close call by Rita),NYC,and Miami
And don't forget the billions to the EAST of N.O.
Actually, Katrina didn't even "hit" New Orleans. It hit east of there... A true hit on N.O., or just a few miles west with an approach from the SSE, will be a telling story for sure. If we think we had a problem in N.O. this time, wait until THAT happens!!
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MiamiensisWx
~Floydbuster wrote:No...the 1926 hurricane (150 mph) would have caused 80-100 billion dollars. Think about a Category 5...175 mph...into downtown Miami, then maintaining Category 3 intensity across Florida...then bombing to 180 mph in the Gulf of Mexico before going straight into New Orleans from the Southeast. Thats a 300-400 billion dollar storm.
If that happened, the cost could be evem higher than that. Why? Think about the INLAND effects once the storm moves inland (e.g., heavy rain, tornadoes, flooding, etc.). That would also amount to some extra damage costs.
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Most apolcalyptic storm would be one that came in as a fairly strong storm either across Miami or the Keys and headed toward Panama City. Before hitting the coast, the storm bends westward and parallels the US Gulf Coast just offshore and rakes NW FL, AL, MS and LA with high winds, storm surge and heavy rainfall. At landfall in Eastern LA south of New Orleans, Stom X then loops back south, hooks west again paralleling the S LA coast before making landfall across Galveston Bay on a WNW heading @ about 5mph destroying Galveston, Beaumont, Port Arthur (again) and severely damaging Houston, TX.
Steve
Steve
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Anonymous
Steve wrote:Most apolcalyptic storm would be one that came in as a fairly strong storm either across Miami or the Keys and headed toward Panama City. Before hitting the coast, the storm bends westward and parallels the US Gulf Coast just offshore and rakes NW FL, AL, MS and LA with high winds, storm surge and heavy rainfall. At landfall in Eastern LA south of New Orleans, Stom X then loops back south, hooks west again paralleling the S LA coast before making landfall across Galveston Bay on a WNW heading @ about 5mph destroying Galveston, Beaumont, Port Arthur (again) and severely damaging Houston, TX.
Steve
Call it...Hurricane Isaac. Isaac sounds like a BIG storm.
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Derek Ortt
I believe that much of the normalization under estimates the damage
before Katrina, there wer eestimates that a cane in NO would only cause 25 billion in damage. We all saw how well that panned out.
In Dade, the models are outdated due to the rapid construction anyways. That storm wiould affect 5 million including Dade and Broward
before Katrina, there wer eestimates that a cane in NO would only cause 25 billion in damage. We all saw how well that panned out.
In Dade, the models are outdated due to the rapid construction anyways. That storm wiould affect 5 million including Dade and Broward
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Anonymous
Derek Ortt wrote:I believe that much of the normalization under estimates the damage
before Katrina, there wer eestimates that a cane in NO would only cause 25 billion in damage. We all saw how well that panned out.
In Dade, the models are outdated due to the rapid construction anyways. That storm wiould affect 5 million including Dade and Broward
Very true. But also....casinos....the entire Mississippi coast...Mobile...FL Panhandle...
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krysof
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