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Katrina's Economic Impact

By Mark Trumbull, Christian Science Monitor. Posted September 1, 2005.


As it ripples through the economy in coming weeks, the storm's effects could be big enough to spur wide-ranging changes to our energy infrastructure.
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The storm that ruptured the roof of the Louisiana Superdome is also putting a dent in the nation's economy. Even as rescuers pushed Wednesday to contain a mounting death toll and help stranded residents in the ravaged Gulf Coast, hurricane Katrina's financial impact was also emerging as an issue that reaches far beyond Louisiana levees or Alabama inlets.

Whether that cost proves to be relatively modest -- shaving perhaps 0.5 percentage points off of an economy growing at a 3.3 percent pace -- or a more severe shock depends on one key factor: energy.

The Bush administration moved Wednesday to open the nation's Strategic Petroleum Reserve to help ease looming supply shortages. With 10 percent of the nation's refining capacity, and pipelines through which much of America's domestic and imported oil passes, the region has an outsized oil and gas role that makes this storm's impact much broader than that of other major hurricanes, or even the combined wallop of four hurricanes in Florida last year.

"This is more significant," says economist John Silvia of Wachovia Corp., a banking giant in the region. And if supply disruptions prove difficult to fix quickly, "it's a very big complication."

The prospect of $3-a-gallon gasoline, rising airline ticket costs, and soaring winter heating bills is accompanied by Katrina's more local effects: insured losses that could exceed the record (in current dollars) of $21 billion set by hurricane Andrew in 1992.

Indeed, even as it ripples through the economy in coming weeks, this storm's effects could be big enough to spur longer-term changes at a time when the intensity of tropical storms appears to be rising. These issues range from the local -- how to better fortify New Orleans in its below-sea-level vulnerability -- to whether the nation's energy infrastructure is too geographically concentrated and whether disaster planning is hampered by incomplete forecasting of risks.

The storm left hundreds of thousands homeless in the region, at least 100 dead in hardest--hit Mississippi alone, and homes damaged by floods and winds well inland from Tennessee to Georgia. Estimates of insured losses go as high as $25 billion, although many experts believe the total will come in lower.

The Gulf region accounts for only about 3 percent of US economic output, but financial markets are focused on its much greater role in energy production and processing. Stocks crept higher in early trading Wednesday as oil prices retreated because of the government's decision to make an unspecified amount of oil available from its strategic reserve.

Before the announcement, prices had surged above $70 a barrel. Light, sweet crude for October delivery on the New York Mercantile Exchange fell to $69.55 a barrel, down 26 cents from Tuesday's settlement price. Still, the government's move does not remedy destruction to refineries that churn out much of the unleaded regular and premium grade used in the United States. That damage, the extent of which is still being assessed, is expected to drive up gas-pump prices.

Katrina's effect on America's gross domestic product are mere guesswork at this point. The government reported Wednesday that in the second quarter of this year, GDP grew at an annual rate of 3.3 percent, down from a 3.8 percent pace at the beginning of the year.


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Mark Trumbull is a staff writer at the Christian Science Monitor.

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Question? Should we rebuild the city.
Posted by: EJW on Sep 1, 2005 2:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When you factor in global warming, you have to wonder if the city should be rebuilt at all. Maybe it's time to rethink our response to these natural disasters. Maybe the planet is trying to tell us something. Ya Think.

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There is no global warming, there is stupidity and bad planning
Posted by: Frumkinlovesmoney on Sep 1, 2005 3:23 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I do not think there is one shred of evidence to support global warming. This was a monster storm and the aftermath should have been anticipated, planned for and reacted to in advance. The question is, why rebuild? I agree. At least from a livable point of view this place was a disaster waiting to happen. And it did. Also, we should learn from this incident. New Orleans was a corrupt city with one of the most corrupt police departments in the nation. We should also learn not to put all our eggs in one basket. Are those oil platforms I see off the west coast?

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Price Gouging at Pump Reason to Overthrow Bush
Posted by: rangerjim on Sep 1, 2005 4:06 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The rampant price gouging at the gas and diesel fuel pump is suffieicent reason to bring about the overthrow of the Bush Administratiion. It is time for all the transport workers in this country to walk off the job in a nationwide general strike to protest the rampant price gouging now going on, the greed of the oil companies and other elements of corporate America, with the truck driivers the first to walko off the job.. This administration is clearly hostile to the American worker and would rather give illegal wetbacks a license to steal jobs belonging to America. The sooner a general strike can begin, the better, for the need to topple this corrupt administration is growing more urgent every day. By completely shutting down transportation in this country, we could bring down this administration whose moral scruples came from the same gutter as those of Adolf Hitler.

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» Hey Fed Up Posted by: cyclone
david
Posted by: davy on Sep 1, 2005 5:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I read the other day that 80% of Americas money is with 12% of the people. Maybe it's time for them to let go of a little of it. The current disaster is certainly going to show up this divide.

David

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» RE: david Posted by: Frumkinlovesmoney
» RE: david Posted by: cyclone
david
Posted by: davy on Sep 1, 2005 5:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I read the other day that 80% of Americas money is with 12% of the people. Maybe it's time for them to let go of a little of it. The current disaster is certainly going to show up this divide.

David

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» RE: david Posted by: Barbara
» RE: david Posted by: Basenjis
Let the gouging begin
Posted by: cyclone on Sep 1, 2005 5:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As I drove to umpire a college baseball game last night, I noticed that regular unleaded had reached $3.49 per gallon. I am in a city that were it not for the Colts, Pacers, and the 500 no one would have ever heard of, so the demand does not outstrip the supply. It took all of 36 hours after the hurricane for big oil to stomp their blood soaked boots. And then, I see Boosh on television saying that the "Gulf Coast is devastated. Americans are going to have to sacrifice." Really? Anyone with electricity or that can read a newspaper already knew that the "Gulf Coast" was devastated. Fortunately, none of the people caught up in the mess by the gulf had the means to hear his phony, neocon, I care about you spew. Did we really need the Anti-Christ Boosh to confirm that for us by flying Air Force I over the demolished area, wasting "precious fuel" in doing so? I did not hear him say that Exxon, BP and the like should sacrifice, just everyday Americans. Exxon only made a 750 Billion dollar profit the last quarter, they are Booshie's friends, so why should anyone expect them to sacrifice anything? No, they will just wait with their slimy, blood soaked hands out waiting for the next tax cut to come their way so they can "explore alternative energy sources." Yeah, right. At 750 Billion per quarter profit, I'm sure they are right now assembling a team to create an alternative fuel that will cut into those profits. And don't tell me that the Euro's are paying $7 per gallon, so we've got it good. I don't give a rat's ass what they pay, but I do give a rat's ass about being raped by a corrupt, insane lunatic and his cronies. I feel so bad that Boosh had to cut short his 6-15 week vacation for this tragedy. Darn the luck. But there is an upside for him re: the unexpected, premature end to his "time for himself in Crawford." He doesn't have to try to avoid Cindy Sheehan while bicycling in the backwoods of Texas. This bastard and everyone around him needs to be put on permanent vacation, by whatever means necessary. After all, in the words of the psychotic leader, "I've just got to take care of myself, you know, so I can lead." Fuck this ignorant, dimwitted, low IQ unconscionable pig.

Just waiting for the Rapture,

Cyclone

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» RE: Let the gouging begin Posted by: Germanicus
» RE: Let the gouging begin Posted by: cyclone
» Yes. It is your "warped view". Posted by: ABetterFuture
» 750 million? Posted by: WhatNow?
RE: There is no global warming, there is stupidity and bad planning
Posted by: freeboater on Sep 1, 2005 7:34 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Couldn't it be both? Poor planning, the neoliberalisation of risk, changing climate patterns that increase the likelihood of major catostrophic storms making landfall all contributed to this distaster.

In my opinion what we are seeing is not some "freak storm" or a politics game of "where is the national guard". This is hubris plain and simple. For years we have been developing technological "fixes" for natures inability to play along with our needs. There is probably a reason NOT to build a city on a delta...ask the people of Bangladesh. There is probably a reason NOT to build up a river until the adjacent city is BELOW sea level. We have been asking for this type of disaster for 100's of years....and guess what, we are going to see more of them.

We can argue all day about Bush and the price of gas, and the illegality of the war in Iraq (criminal if you ask me). But what that type of bickering and hand wringing does is simply legitimises the institutions that created this mess in the first place.

We need a revolution, and I'm not talking about armed insurection (although...it seemed to work for your forefathers a couple of years back no?). Lets revolutionise our daily lives. Lets make democracy real again. Take the power back by not legitimising these fools in the fist place. The real power is in the people, in your communities...wake up.

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Hiroshima and the Hurricane
Posted by: Robespierre on Sep 1, 2005 8:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The structural and economic damage from the hurricane is on par with the detonation of a medium sized nuclear device, but with a LOT fewer casualties in the case of the hurricane. It makes me ill to think that we intentionally inflicted the kind of suffering we are seeing on the TV this week on the CIVILIAN population of Japan.

In response to the damage in New Orleans, maybe Bush will want to invade the Atlantic Ocean? The mer-people are jealous of our freedom?

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Inflated Oil Company Pockets
Posted by: mrsmagoo on Sep 1, 2005 8:54 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The oil companies sure have it good. The war in Iraq, major disasters, an oilman president. With multi-million dollar profits inflating oil company pockets, its mind-boggling to try to understand WHY did people vote Bush back into office! I saw a comment in the newspaper by someone who said (and I'm paraphrasing here) if the election were held today, they would NOT have voted for Bush. H E L L O! I agree with the comment above about a revolution. It's already happening in New Orleans. Does it take a major disaster like Hurricane Katrina to get people off their duffs and work for change? I'll take the pessimistic view: unless it is in their backyard and affects them personally (i.e.: death, destruction, job loss, etc.), it will not get people to change much. Sad to say that, but it's true.

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Ah, the anti-environmental desperados and lack of personal responsibility from rightwing radicals
Posted by: maxpayne on Sep 1, 2005 9:12 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Dealing with amoral rightists ain't always easy but giving them a taste of their own medicine might do the trick.

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A Chance to Start Over... Or Not.
Posted by: NoPCZone on Sep 1, 2005 9:28 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Because of the large number of petrochemical plants, refineries and other facilities on the lower Mississippi, the stretch of the river between Baton Rouge and New Orleans is known of as Cancer Alley. Many of the wetlands adjacent to this part of the river are a dead zone. Now think about the fact that these chemicals and residues will be soaking into the soil and everything else in the flooded areas of SE Louisiana. Anybody remember Times Beach, Missouri or Love Canal in New York?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Times_Beach,_Missouri

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Love_Canal

Imagine spending tens of billions to rebuild and then finding later that people have suffered a significant toxic exposure.

If the town is to be rebuilt, the only answer is to:
* Raze all of the flooded areas of New Orleans to the ground.
* Import gravel, sand and soil to bring the ground up to at least sea level. 5-10 feet of clean soil should isolate the contaminated ground.
* Restore lost wetlands along Lake Pontchartrain and the lower Mississippi while repairing the levees.
* Ban commercial & residential development adjacent to the protective wetlands and levees.
* Re-zone & re-plat a smaller New Orleans that is much more enviro-friendly.

If they just hand out money and let the developers go wild, a tragedy will happen. We may not be around to see it, but our children will.

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gas issue
Posted by: chaos-abounds on Sep 1, 2005 10:24 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
while the rising gas prices will hit heavy everywhere, the biggest problems are going to arise in rural areas, especially in the state i live, idaho. since a good portion of the population lives in small towns or between major cities, mass transport is non-existant, thus people must depend on individual vehicles for travel. gas rose above $3.00 per gallon last night. this problem is only amplified by the fact that idahos current minimum wage is $5.15/hour. something needs to be done to prevent further gouging at the gas pump.

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» RE: gas issue Posted by: mrsmagoo
Strategic Petroleum Reserve
Posted by: jobie1kno on Sep 1, 2005 11:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I need clarification on this issue. If the govt released CRUDE from the strategic petroleum reserve, that needs REFINING, where's the PETROLEUM?

Or is this simply another example of the administration doing what they can to help 'poor old' Exxon etc. keep their refineries operating (and therefore profitable), while the real suffering, starvation and loss goes on in the Gulf area unimpeded; oh yes, and the rest of us get bilked at the pumps. I wonder if Halliburton is setting up at the Astrodome refugee camp...
Pople are dying right now. This isn't the third world. ALL Americans should be outraged at the time it's taking to help these people.

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Haven't you people been listening?
Posted by: Pooty T on Sep 1, 2005 12:07 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
THIS IS NOT PRICE GOUGING! This is a supply problem that is only going to get worse. We're lucky that most of the oil infrastructure is still intact down there. We lost something like 1 rig and 3 refineries. So we're looking at a temporary supply shortfall that can be offset by the SPR rather than real long term damage to our production capacity. This is about the best case scenario we could have asked for given the circumstances.

The real problem here is called Peak Oil. Fossil fuels are a finite resource and the supply is about to peak if it hasn't already. The prices you are seeing at the pump (correcting for Katrina) are not coming down ever again. If they do it will be temporary, and then they'll go right back up even higher. This is a natural supply problem and has nothing to do with price gouging! The conspiracy here is that the prices are so low!

We have some of the cheapest gas prices in the world, as most other countries pay 2-3 times what we pay. What are you foolish Americans whining about?

Think about this:

We use 25% of the world's energy supply, but have only 5% of the world's population.

We are number 1 in defense (offense) spending, and spend more than the next 17 countries combined.

You do the math.

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» RE: Haven't you people been listening? Posted by: JimTheAnarchist
» Couple of points Posted by: nickptar
» Supply vs. Demand Posted by: Pooty T
» RE: Supply vs. Demand Posted by: cyclone
After an evening of watching the Carnage
Posted by: cyclone on Sep 1, 2005 9:25 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Every citizen over the age of 16 should be forced to watch this madness in New Orleans, just to make sure that it never happens again. If we had brains, we would get out of here now while we still can. A year from now no civilized nation will take us. If people haven't figured out by now that there is a madman at the wheel, then it will never happen. Have we ever heard of parachuting a few bottles of water from an airplane or a helicopter? We certainly have mastered the floating propoganda leaflets, so surely we could do a little water and a few RTE's. Oh, I forgot. All the planes and copters are in Afghanistan/Iraq. Stupid me. Sure glad the bastard decided to leave his 2 month vacation early ("hey, I've got to live my life too, you know, so I can lead) to fly over and give us an update on the devastation. I was wondering what was going on down there, certainly haven't seen anything on the Telly, in the newspaper, or online about it. Whew! I was worried that it might be bad, but I'm glad to know that all we need is a little patience, help is on the way. Wonder if he knows that the people down there don't have Telly's, newspapers, or online service since the Great Flood. I know, Details, Details. Happy to hear that he refused N.O.'s request for $70 million in 2001 to repair the levee's , damn that's a lot of money. But, he gave 'em 19, just enough to shut them up, but not enough to actually do some work. Oh yeah, I forgot that money was being saved back for the party in Iraq. Now they've authorized 14 Billion to clean up the mess. Oh well, just another day at the ranch. Also glad that we don't have to pull any of the boys from the war on terror to help out here at home. I was afraid for a second that Osama might escape. Heard he's going to do another fly over tomorrow. Although I know he won't get within 25 miles of the Sooperdome for fear of some mad, thirsty, hungry, dirty criminal sniping his ass, but I hope he at least flies low enough to smell the stench of the dead floating down Bourbon Street. Also noticed that the Pres of Tulane got a quick ride to Houston, only had to take a golf cart, helicopter and plane to get there. What did he do? Cut in line? Smiling like a six year old at his birthday party, said he's Hoping to start school in a few weeks. Wouldn't want the kiddies to get behind. Jesus Christ, we are a 3rd world country. And, not a very good one at that. It is indeed over. Until next time,
Cyclone

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Power and Civility
Posted by: Olympiada on Sep 2, 2005 11:43 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The City of New Orleans was not prepared for this kind of disaster. It sounds to me like The City of New Orleans was a risky proposition in and of itself, geographically speaking. It like the Marina district in SF, built on landfill...
Sounds to me like the US military needs to pull out of all its foreign occupations and concentrate on helping and rebuilding back at home, permanently.
The US may be the most 'powerful' country in the world, but I think that power is that of a bully. So what.
Deal with the suffering at home...
The US needs to humble down... Stop trying to dominate the world. Why do we need to be the 'superpower'. What is this whole deal with power anyways?
Very uncivilized.

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Jobs for "refugees"
Posted by: larrykendall on Sep 4, 2005 11:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There is work available for skilled people in Orange County CA. The contractors in Orange County have given up on advertising in the local papers.

My company has work and investement opportunities available at www.wineenvironments. com

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