Retired by the Trump administration in May, the Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters Database has been relaunched outside government by Climate Central, using the same methods and led by previous administrator Adam Smith, a former NOAA economist. Its first update shows the first half of 2025 is costliest since 1980, with $101.4 billion across 14 billion‑dollar events—dominated by severe thunderstorms and March tornadoes, and punctuated by January’s Los Angeles fires, a $61.2 billion disaster and the costliest U.S. wildfire. Smith says rising damages reflect human choices, as billion‑dollar events now occur nearly twice as often as the long‑term average.
This 60-second summary was prepared by the JQJO editorial team after reviewing 1 original report from CNN.
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