The first component is the Material and objective disaster that has occurred, and is Hurricane Harvey. The second are the social, cultural and subjective conditions that have combined to produce the disaster. Hurricane Harvey’s devastation is without precedent, as trillions of gallons of water drown the Huston area. Residents can’t get on the freeways and go anywhere, homes and buildings are in ruins, tens of thousands of people are displaced, and the death toll is rising as well as the economic toll. Despite Harvey dumping record rain fall, this part of the country floods naturally. Huston is located on the Gulf coastal plane. The coastal prairies and the wetlands were here before Huston built its city and everything that was here before was built to naturally flood. One problem is Huston is mainly flat and its mostly marshland that’s barley above sea level. Rapid urban development hasn’t helped as the city paved over the habitats that soak up floodwaters. A Huston resident is quoted in the The New York Times saying that “there’s nowhere for this water to go other than to flood our homes and communities.” Climate change isn’t helping either. Sea surface temperatures have warmed on average by 1 degree Fahrenheit over the last few decades. This impacts Huston since higher evaporation rates means more water in the atmosphere and its got to go somewhere, so you get torrential
The first component is the Material and objective disaster that has occurred, and is Hurricane Harvey. The second are the social, cultural and subjective conditions that have combined to produce the disaster. Hurricane Harvey’s devastation is without precedent, as trillions of gallons of water drown the Huston area. Residents can’t get on the freeways and go anywhere, homes and buildings are in ruins, tens of thousands of people are displaced, and the death toll is rising as well as the economic toll. Despite Harvey dumping record rain fall, this part of the country floods naturally. Huston is located on the Gulf coastal plane. The coastal prairies and the wetlands were here before Huston built its city and everything that was here before was built to naturally flood. One problem is Huston is mainly flat and its mostly marshland that’s barley above sea level. Rapid urban development hasn’t helped as the city paved over the habitats that soak up floodwaters. A Huston resident is quoted in the The New York Times saying that “there’s nowhere for this water to go other than to flood our homes and communities.” Climate change isn’t helping either. Sea surface temperatures have warmed on average by 1 degree Fahrenheit over the last few decades. This impacts Huston since higher evaporation rates means more water in the atmosphere and its got to go somewhere, so you get torrential