4 minute read

Ian Will Be Costly, Perhaps The Most In U.S. History

By Steve Wilson

The Center Square

Ian, the Category 4 hurricane that slammed Florida’s western coast, has crossed the state back to the Atlantic and is taking aim for South

Carolina on Sept. 30.

With it may be the costliest hurricane on record.

The U.S. record is 2005’s Hurricane Katrina, according to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It’s toll was estimated at $186 billion when adjusted for inflation into 2022 dollars.

The top five, estimated and adjusted for inflation, also includes hurricanes Harvey (2017, $149 billion), Maria (2017, $107 billion), Sandy (2012, $82 billion) and Ida (2021, $79 billion). Hurricane Andrew hit southern Florida in 1992. It was the costliest storm to hit the U.S. mainland until Katrina. Its more than $26 billion cost would double past $50 billion in today’s dollars, according to estimates. The National Hurricane Center, in its Sept. 29 update, expected Ian to possibly reintensify to at or near hurricane strength (winds of 75 mph or greater) and make landfall on the South Carolina coast between Beaufort and Charleston on Sept. 30.

According to the NHC, sustained tropical storm force winds (45 mph or greater) are present 415 miles from the center of circulation, which by the morning of Sept. 29 had reached the Atlantic off the coast of Florida.

South Carolina Gov. Henry McMaster issued an emergency declaration and initiated the state’s emergency response plan.

“It’s still too early to know exactly how Hurricane Ian will affect South Carolina, but preparations at the state level are well underway, and this declaration of emergency is another step in that process,” McMaster said. “We do know we’ll see a lot of rain and significant storm surge on our coastline over the coming days—now is the time for each South Carolina to make plans for every contingency and be prepared.”

Back in Florida, Ian is already the fourth-strongest hurricane to make landfall in terms of sustained wind. It was roaring with sustained winds of 150 mph when it made initial landfall near Cayo Costa, just south of Tampa.

On the Saffir-Simpson Hurricane Wind Scale, Category 4 is winds of 130-156 mph and Category 5 is winds 157 mph or greater.

Florida’s strongest was the Labor Day Hurricane of 1935, which had 185 mph winds and struck the Florida Keys, killing 409. Next strongest was 1992’s Andrew, which struck Homestead with 165 mph winds. The next strongest storm was 2019’s Hurricane Michael, which impacted the Panama City area with 150 mph winds.

Ian, considering the size of its wind field, the intensity it carried inland and the population of the area where it made landfall, could top Hurricane Andrew as the costliest storm to make landfall in Florida.

The Cape Coral and Ft. Myers metro area has a population of 787,926, according to data from the U.S. Census Bureau. That’s not counting the inland areas affected by the storm as it creeped across the peninsula toward the Atlantic.

“...now is the time for each South Carolina to make plans for every contingency and be prepared.”

— HENRY MCMASTER

SOUTH CAROLINA GOVERNOR

l CONTINUED FROMCOVER

Ford Breaks Ground

jobs when production begins in 2025.

“We are building the future right here in West Tennessee,” said Eric Grubb, Ford’s director of new footprint construction. “This facility is the blueprint for Ford’s future manufacturing facilities and will enable Ford to help lead America’s shift to electric vehicles.”

With construction underway at BlueOval City, Ford—America’s No. 2 electric vehicle brand—gets closer to its target of a 2 million EV production run rate globally by late 2026.

“Ford’s historic investment in West Tennessee is a testament to our state’s strong business climate and unmatched workforce,” said Gov. Bill Lee. “BlueOval City will have a transformational impact on Tennesseans and our economy, and we’re proud this global company will call Haywood County home.”

Ford continues to engage with communities in West Tennessee, including through livestreamed discussions and collaborative projects. Most significantly, the company is working with the University of Tennessee to restore the stream waters flowing through the University’s Lone Oaks Farm and to expand STEM education to Tennessee students from kindergarten through 12th grade.

BlueOval City Construction by the Numbers

Significant progress has been made since March, when Ford and its construction partners began preparing the land for construction.

Crews have moved more than 4.6 million cubic yards of soil, enough to fill approximately 34,500 backyard swimming pools

Nearly 370,000 tons of stone have been laid, the weight of more than 1,600 Statues of Liberty

More than 4,600 deep foundations installed, totaling the height of approximately 176 Eiffel Towers when put end to end

— Source: Ford

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