Americans are leaving many of the U.S. counties hit hardest by hurricanes and heatwavesāand moving towards dangerous wildfires and warmer temperatures, finds one of the largest studies of U.S. migration and natural hazards.
The ten-year national study reveals troubling public health patterns, with Americans flocking to regions with the greatest risk of wildfires and significant summer heat. These environmental hazards are already causing significant damage to people and property each yearāand projected to worsen with climate change.
āThese findings are concerning, because people are moving into harmās wayāinto regions with wildfires and rising temperatures, which are expected to become more extreme due to climate change,ā said ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ (¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½) study lead author Mahalia Clark, noting that the study was inspired by the increasing number of headlines of record-breaking natural disasters.
Published by the journal , the studyātitled āFlocking to Fireāāis the largest investigation yet of how natural disasters, climate change and other factors impacted U.S. migration over the last decade (2010-2020). āOur goal was to understand how extreme weather is influencing migration as it becomes more severe with climate change,ā Clark said.
āRed-hotā real estate
The top U.S. migration destinations over the last decade were cities and suburbs in the Pacific Northwest, parts of the Southwest (in Arizona, Colorado, Nevada, Utah), Texas, Florida, and a large swath of the Southeast (from Nashville to Atlanta to Washington, D.C.)ālocations that face significant wildfire risks and relatively warm annual temperatures. In contrast, people tended to move away from places in the Midwest, the Great Plains, and along the Mississippi River, including many counties hit hardest by hurricanes or frequent heatwaves, the researchers say.
āThese findings suggest that, for many Americans, the risks and dangers of living in hurricane zones may be starting to outweigh the benefits of life in those areas,ā said ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ co-author Gillian Galford, who led the recent Vermont Climate Assessment. āThat same tipping point has yet to happen for wildfires and rising summer heat, which have emerged as national issues more recently.ā
One implication of the studyāgiven how development can exacerbate risks in fire-prone areasāis that city planners may need to consider discouraging new development where fires are most likely or difficult to fight, researchers say. At a minimum, policymakers must consider fire prevention in areas of high risk with large growth in human populations, and work to increase public awareness and preparedness.
Homes in danger
We hope this study will increase peopleās awareness of wildfire risk,ā said Clark. āMost people think of wildfire as just a problem in the West, but wildfire now impacts large swaths of the countryāthe Northwest down to the Southwest, but also parts of the Midwest and the Southeast like Appalachia and Florida.ā
Despite climate changeās underlying role in extreme weather events, the team was surprised by how little the obvious climate impacts of wildfire and heat seemed to impact migration. āIf you look where people are moving, these are some of the countryās warmest placesāwhich are only expected to get hotter,ā said Clark, a researcher at ¶¶ŅõĢ½Ģ½ās Gund Institute for Environment and Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources.
āWhen youāre looking for a place to live on Zillow or through real-estate agents, many donāt highlight that youāre looking at a fire-prone region, or a place where summer heat is expected to become extreme,ā said Clark, noting the website Redfin recently added risk scores to listings. āYou have to do your research.ā
Migration factors
Beyond the aversion to hurricanes and heatwaves, the study identified several other clear preferencesāa mix of environmental, social, and economic factorsāthat also contributed to U.S. migration decisions over the last decade.
The teamās analysis revealed a set of common qualities shared among the top migration destinations: warmer winters, proximity to water, moderate tree cover, moderate population density, better human development index (HDI) scoresāplus wildfire risks. In contrast, for the counties people left, common traits included low employment, higher income inequality, and more summer humidity, heatwaves, and hurricanes.
Researchers note that Florida remained a top migration destination, despite a history of hurricanesāand increasing wildfire. While nationally, people were less attracted to counties hit by hurricanes, many peopleāparticularly retireesāstill moved to Florida, attracted by the warm climate, beaches, and other qualities shared by top migration destinations. Although hurricanes likely factor into peopleās choices, the study suggests that, overall, the benefits of Floridaās desirable amenities still outweigh the perceived risks of life there, researchers say.
āThe decision to move is a complicated and personal decision that involves weighing dozens of factors,ā said Clark. āWeighing all these factors, we see a general aversion to hurricane risk, but ultimatelyāas we see in Floridaāitās one factor in a personās list of pros and cons, which can be outweighed by other preferences.ā
For the study, researchers combined census data with data on natural disasters, weather, temperature, land cover, and demographic and socioeconomic factors. While the study includes data from the first year of the COVID pandemic, the researchers plan to delve deeper into the impacts of remote work, house prices, and the cost of living.
The study, is the largest investigation yet of how natural disasters and climate change impacted U.S. migration over the last decade.
As global climate change progresses, the U.S. is expected to experience warmer temperatures, as well as more frequent and severe extreme weather events, including heat waves, hurricanes, wildfires and floods. Each year, these events cost dozens of lives and do billions of dollars worth of damage.
MEDIA CONTACTS
Basil Waugh
University of Vermont
Gund Institute for Environment
Email: basil.waugh@uvm.edu
²Ń²¹³ó²¹±ō¾±²¹āÆC±ō²¹°ł°ģ, study lead author
University of Vermont
Email: mahalia.clark@uvm.edu