US endures 23 billion-dollar disasters in 2025

The United States experienced 23 billion-dollar weather and climate disasters in 2025, resulting in 276 deaths and $115 billion in damages, according to Climate Central. This marked the 15th straight year of above-average events, with disasters occurring every 10 days on average. The year began with devastating wildfires in Los Angeles and included severe storms and tornadoes across multiple regions.

The year 2025 brought a relentless series of extreme weather events to the United States, as detailed in a new analysis by Climate Central. Starting with the costliest wildfires in American history, blazes ravaged Los Angeles for nearly the entire month of January, causing $61.2 billion in damages—more than half of the year's total losses. These fires triggered a public health crisis, with hundreds likely dying from toxic smoke inhalation, exacerbating conditions like heart and cardiovascular disease as plastics and metals burned.

Severe storms battered the South and Northeast, while tornadoes struck central states, hail hit Texas and Colorado, and drought plus heat waves affected the West. Of the 23 events, 21 involved tornadoes, hail, or high winds, making 2025 the second-most costly year for severe storms after 2023. The warmer atmosphere, holding more moisture, intensified rainfall and flooding, with the hot Gulf of Mexico adding fuel to southern storms.

Climate change amplified these disasters, worsening wildfires, heavier rains, and stronger hurricanes, though no major hurricanes made U.S. landfall due to an atmospheric barrier over the Southeast. This luck kept costs from potentially doubling to $215 billion. Still, the Atlantic season was intense: five hurricanes formed, 80% reaching major strength—double the typical rate—and it was the second year with at least three Category 5 storms. Hurricane Melissa, which devastated the Caribbean, intensified rapidly from 70 mph to 140 mph winds in 18 hours, fueled by record ocean temperatures made hundreds of times more likely by climate change.

Human factors, like expansion into wildland-urban interfaces, compounded the destruction. In May, the Trump administration halted updates to NOAA's billion-dollar disaster database, prompting Climate Central to revive it in October. "The continuation of this dataset... is important because it helps demonstrate the economic impact of extreme weather," said Adam Smith, senior climate impacts scientist at Climate Central. He noted that estimates remain conservative, excluding unmeasurable losses like mental health trauma. Since 1980, the U.S. has seen 426 such disasters totaling over $3.1 trillion, with events now averaging every 16 days in the last decade, down from 82 days in the 1980s.

Smith emphasized enhancing the database for better policymaking: "By this time next year... it'll be even a much more useful and helpful data resource."

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U.S. map illustration highlighting uneven state warming: hotter highs in West, warmer lows in North, contrasting averages and extremes.
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Study finds most U.S. states are warming in uneven ways that averages can miss

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A study in PLOS Climate reports that U.S. warming trends vary sharply by state and by whether researchers look at temperature averages or extremes. Using data from 1950 to 2021 for the 48 contiguous states, the authors found that 27 states showed statistically significant increases in average temperature, while 41 showed warming in at least one part of their temperature range—such as hotter highs in parts of the West and warmer cold-season lows in parts of the North.

A massive heat wave in the Western US and a potential El Niño event signal concerns for unpredictable extreme weather ahead. Despite 2025 ranking as the third-hottest year on record, it saw fewer climate disasters than expected.

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A recent study in Science Advances has found that the number of days with conditions ideal for extreme wildfires—combining heat, drought, and wind—has nearly tripled globally in the past 45 years. This increase, driven largely by human-caused climate change, is most notable in the Americas and involves more frequent simultaneous risks across regions. The findings highlight challenges for firefighting resources and underscore the need for homeowner preparedness.

The World Meteorological Organization and Food and Agriculture Organization have issued a joint report detailing how extreme heat is disrupting global food production. The document highlights severe effects in Brazil and other countries, urging better adaptation strategies. It responds to a United Nations call to address heat risks for workers and food systems.

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Cities from Paris to Barcelona are staging elaborate drills to prepare for extreme heat waves made more likely by climate change. These exercises test emergency responses, infrastructure, and public awareness amid warnings of deadly temperatures ahead. Officials say the simulations reveal critical weaknesses before real crises hit.

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