By Daniel Brouse / October 24, 2025
n a quiet yet devastating policy move, the Trump administration shut down a NOAA program that tracked U.S. weather disasters causing over $1 billion in damages. The program—critical for assessing economic losses from hurricanes, floods, wildfires, and droughts—provided indispensable data for policymakers, insurers, and researchers. Its termination not only blinded the public to the scale of destruction but also concealed the rapidly accelerating costs of climate change.
This was not an isolated act. It was part of a systematic dismantling of scientific infrastructure across federal agencies—one that silenced climate data, censored reports, and obstructed communication between scientists and the public. By halting NOAA’s billion-dollar disaster tracking, the administration effectively turned off one of the most important warning systems humanity had against environmental and economic collapse.
The Rising Cost of Climate Disasters
The cost of climate disasters is rising exponentially. In the 1990s, we first hypothesized the non-linear acceleration of climate change. My lab partner—a Doctor of Physics from Ohio State—and I collaborated to provide the key evidence that helped establish this theory. By the early 2000s, our work had evolved into a foundational climate model supported by experimental and observational data. Over the next two decades, independent validation by researchers worldwide cemented this as scientific consensus.
What we found—and what subsequent studies confirmed—is that the doubling time of climate impacts has been collapsing. Initially, global damages doubled roughly every 100 years. By the 2010s, that interval shrank to a decade. Today, evidence suggests that the doubling time is now just two years.
This means that the damage caused by climate change today is double what it was two years ago. In two more years, it could be four times worse. In four years, eight times worse. Within a decade, potentially 64 times worse—and that projection is conservative.
This rapid escalation isn’t an anomaly—it’s a signature of a destabilizing nonlinear system. Climate feedback loops, such as melting permafrost releasing methane or diminishing ice reducing planetary reflectivity, are compounding one another. Our probabilistic, ensemble-based climate model—which integrates socio-economic and ecological feedback loops within a dynamic nonlinear framework—projects that global temperatures are becoming unsustainable within this century.
This exceeds even the direst early projections of a 4°C rise over a millennium. Instead, we are entering an era of compound, cascading collapse, where climate, ecological, and societal systems destabilize together through self-reinforcing feedbacks.
Some Costs of Carbon Combustion
Below are ten categories of economic and societal costs directly linked to climate change, backed by peer-reviewed research and government data. They illustrate that the cost of inaction now dwarfs the cost of mitigation.
1. Lost Productivity Due to Extreme Heat — $100+ Billion Annually (U.S.)
Sources: Lancet, NOAA, GAO
Outdoor labor sectors—construction, agriculture, logistics—are losing billions due to heat-induced work stoppages, fatigue, and health risks. In 2023 alone, extreme heat cost the U.S. economy over $100 billion in lost productivity and medical impacts.
2. Flash Floods and Infrastructure Damage
Sources: FEMA, CBO
Flash floods have become national catastrophes. In just the first half of 2024, they caused over $50 billion in damage. By July 2025, hundreds of flash floods had devastated communities from coast to coast, including multiple “1-in-1,000-year” storms—once statistically impossible events that now occur several times a year.
3. Wildfires — Direct and Indirect Costs
Sources: National Interagency Fire Center, Climate Central
Beyond destruction and death, wildfires create hidden costs—smoke-related health crises, lost tourism, carbon loss, and power grid instability. By July 2025, wildfire-related damages reached $93 billion, with total economic costs exceeding $250 billion.
4. Air Conditioning Feedback Loops
Sources: IEA, IPCC
As heat intensifies, global cooling demand could triple by 2050—fueling more emissions and grid stress, creating a vicious self-reinforcing cycle.
5. Supply Chain Disruptions
Sources: World Bank, McKinsey, IMF
Floods, droughts, and hurricanes are crippling supply routes. Droughts in the Panama Canal and Mississippi River alone disrupted hundreds of billions in trade, while storms halted semiconductor and medical supply production worldwide.
6. Housing Market Instability and Insurance Collapse
Sources: Moody’s, Insurance Information Institute
As insurers flee high-risk zones—Florida, California, and Gulf states—millions of Americans are left uninsured. Property values are collapsing in regions now deemed “uninsurable.”
7. Public Health and Disease Expansion
Sources: CDC, WHO
Vector-borne diseases like dengue and West Nile are spreading northward. Heat-related ER visits are soaring. Climate-driven illness is projected to cost the U.S. $100–200 billion annually by the 2030s.
8. Agricultural Disruption and Food Inflation
Sources: USDA, FAO, IPCC
Floods, droughts, and shifting seasons are destabilizing food supply chains. Between 2022 and 2024, climate-related crop failures drove global food inflation above 10%, fueling hunger and unrest.
9. Intensifying Storms and Hurricane Damages
Sources: NOAA, Munich Re
Hurricanes are now slower, wetter, and vastly more destructive. U.S. hurricane damage averages $54 billion per year, with some storms topping $100 billion.
10. Climate-Driven Migration and Social Disruption
Sources: UNHCR, Brookings
More than 20 million people per year are already displaced by climate impacts—a number expected to multiply as coastlines vanish, droughts intensify, and agriculture collapses.
The Economic Case for Climate Action
The data are irrefutable: the cost of inaction now far exceeds the cost of action. Transitioning to renewables, electrifying transportation, and investing in resilient infrastructure are not acts of charity—they are acts of survival and sound economics.
By defunding NOAA’s billion-dollar disaster program and suppressing scientific evidence, the Trump administration delayed this reckoning. But the truth cannot be buried. Every hurricane, fire, and flood now exposes the cost of ignoring climate science—and every delay doubles the price humanity must pay.