Total economic losses from the weather events in the U.S. during the month of December will exceed $4 billion, with insured losses likely to approach or exceed $2 billion, according to Aon Benfield’s catastrophe modeling team, Impact Forecasting.
The severe weather pattern resulted in at least 58 tornado touchdowns, historic flooding in the Mississippi Valley and Midwest, and record snowfall and ice that led to extensive travel disruption, as well as hail and damaging winds.
Aon’s December catastrophe report reveals that a complex weather pattern impacted multiple regions of the United States, killing at least 64 people. Parts of the Midwest, Plains, Southeast, Rockies and Northeast were all impacted by the inclement weather, though the states of Missouri, Texas, Illinois, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Mississippi, Tennessee, Alabama, Kentucky and Indiana were among the hardest-hit.
The Å˽ðÁ«´«Ã½Ó³» Council of Texas reported losses of $1.2 billion in the Dallas metropolitan area alone.
Photo caption: A car sits on the front lawn of a home Monday, Dec. 28, 2015, in Garland, Texas. Residents surveyed the destruction from deadly tornadoes in North Texas as the same storm system brought winter woes to the Midwest, amplifying flooding that has been blamed for more than a dozen deaths and hundreds of flight cancellations. (G.J. McCarthy/The Dallas Morning News via AP.)
Related:
- Deadly Floods Disrupting Agriculture, Commercial Operations in U.S. Midwest
- Cleanup Begins in Illinois, Missouri after Massive Flooding
- Insured Loss Estimate from Texas Tornadoes at $1.2B, So Far
- AIR Worldwide: At Least 9 Tornadoes in North Texas; Extent of Damage Not Yet Known
- Texas Storms That Spawned Tornadoes Kill at Least 11
- Oklahoma Medical Examiner Links 5 Deaths to Weekend Storm
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