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What Hurricane Harvey says about risk, climate and resilience

As atmospheric scientists in Texas, we already know the hazards are real

Hurricane Harvey
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Harvey is the strongest storm to hit the US since 2004. After making landfall, it was downgraded to a tropical storm and came to a near-standstill near the town of Victoria, Texas | Photo: Reuters

Andrew Dessler | Daniel Cohan | Katharine Hayhoe | The Conversation
Hurricane Harvey has taught us many lessons, but the most valuable may be the oldest lesson of all, one we humans have been learning – and forgetting – since the dawn of time: how much we all have to lose when climate and weather disasters strike.
The risks we face from disasters depend on three factors: hazard, exposure and vulnerability. In the case of Harvey, the hazard was the hurricane with its associated winds, storm surge and, most of all, rain. Houston is one of North America’s biggest metro areas, making 6.6 million people exposed to this hazard. Finally, there’s our

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