Global warming is coming for your home (2024)

Think about the places vulnerable to climate change, and you might picture rice paddies in Bangladesh or low-lying islands in the Pacific. But another, more surprising answer ought to be your own house. About a tenth of the world’s residential property by value is under threat from global warming—including many houses that are nowhere near the coast. From tornadoes battering midwestern American suburbs to tennis-ball-size hailstones smashing the roofs of Italian villas, the severe weather brought about by greenhouse-gas emissions is shaking the foundations of the world’s most important asset class.

The potential costs stem from policies designed to reduce the emissions of houses as well as from climate-related damage. They are enormous. By one estimate, climate change and the fight against it could wipe out 9% of the value of the world’s housing by 2050—which amounts to $25trn, not much less than America’s annual gDP. It is a huge bill hanging over people’s lives and the global financial system. And it looks destined to trigger an almighty fight over who should pay up.

Homeowners are one candidate. But if you look at property markets today, they do not seem to be bearing the costs. House prices show little sign of adjusting to climate risk. In Miami, the subject of much worrying about rising sea levels, they have increased by four-fifths this decade, much more than the American average. Moreover, because the impact of climate change is still uncertain, many owners may not have known how much of a risk they were taking when they bought their homes.

Yet if taxpayers cough up instead, they will bail out well-heeled owners and blunt helpful incentives to adapt to the looming threat. Apportioning the costs will be hard for governments, not least because they know voters care so much about the value of their homes. The bill has three parts: paying for repairs, investing in protection and modifying houses to limit climate change.

Insurers usually bear the costs of repairs after a storm destroys a roof or a fire guts a property. As the climate worsens and natural disasters become more frequent, home insurance is therefore getting more expensive. In places, it could become so dear as to cause house prices to fall; some experts warn of a “climate-insurance bubble” affecting a third of American homes. Governments must either tolerate the losses that imposes on homeowners or underwrite the risks themselves, as already happens in parts of wildfire-prone California and hurricane-prone Florida. The combined exposure of state-backed “insurers of last resort” in these two states has exploded from $160bn in 2017 to $633bn. Local politicians want to pass on the risk to the federal government, which in effect runs flood insurance today.

Physical damage might be forestalled by investing in protection in properties themselves or in infrastructure. Keeping houses habitable may call for air conditioning. Few Indian homes have it, even though the country is suffering worsening heatwaves. In the Netherlands a system of dykes, ditches and pumps keeps the country dry; Tokyo has barriers to hold back floodwaters. Funding this investment is the second challenge. Should homeowners who had no idea they were at risk have to pay for, say, concrete underpinning for a subsiding house? Or is it right to protect them from such unexpected, and unevenly distributed, costs? Densely populated coastal cities, which are most in need of protection from floods, are often the crown jewels of their countries’ economies and societies—just think of London, New York or Shanghai.

The last question is how to pay for domestic modifications that prevent further climate change. Houses account for 18% of global energy-related emissions. Many are likely to need heat pumps, which work best with underfloor heating or bigger radiators, and thick insulation. Unfortunately, retrofitting homes is expensive. Asking homeowners to pay up can lead to a backlash; last year Germany’s ruling coalition tried to ban gas boilers, only to change course when voters objected to the costs. Italy followed an alternative approach, by offering extraordinarily generous, and badly designed, handouts to households who renovate. It has spent a staggering €219bn ($238bn, or 10% of its GDp) on its “superbonus” scheme.

The full impact of climate change is still some way off. But the sooner policymakers can resolve these questions, the better. The evidence shows that house prices react to these risks only after disaster has struck, when it is too late for preventive investments. Inertia is therefore likely to lead to nasty surprises. Housing is too important an asset to be mispriced across the economy—not least because it is so vital to the financial system.

Governments will have to do their bit. Until the 18th century much of the Netherlands followed the principle that only nearby communities would maintain dykes—and the system was plagued by underinvestment and needless flooding as a result. Governments alone can solve such collective-action problems by building infrastructure, and must do so especially around high-productivity cities. Owners will need inducements to spend big sums retrofitting their homes to pollute less, which benefits everyone.

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At the same time, however, policymakers must be careful not to subsidise folly by offering large implicit guarantees and explicit state-backed insurance schemes. These not only pose an unacceptable risk to taxpayers, but they also weaken the incentive for people to invest in making their properties more resilient. And by suppressing insurance premiums, they do nothing to discourage people from moving to areas that are already known to be high-risk today. The omens are not good, even though the stakes are so high. For decades governments have failed to disincentivise building on floodplains.

The $25trn bill will pose problems around the world. But doing nothing today will only make tomorrow more painful. For both governments and homeowners, the worst response to the housing conundrum would be to ignore it.

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This article appeared in the Leaders section of the print edition under the headline "The next housing disaster"

Leaders April 13th 2024

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  • Global warming is coming for your home
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  • The short-sighted Israeli army
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Global warming is coming for your home (1)

From the April 13th 2024 edition

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Global warming is coming for your home (2024)

FAQs

Global warming is coming for your home? ›

Global Warming Is Coming For Our Homes. A briefing offered by The Economist news magazine recently stated “Global warming is coming for your home.” The briefing forecast a US $25 trillion bill that American homeowners will face in the not-too-distant future from the physical risks of climate change.

What climate change will mean for your home? ›

Climate change can have other significant economic implications for homeownership, including higher insurance premiums, decreased property values in high-risk areas, and increased costs for repairs and maintenance.

How to prepare your home for global warming? ›

3. Make your home more resilient
  1. Elevate appliances such as water heaters, heating and cooling systems, and electrical panels.
  2. Avoid storing valuable items on the lowest level of your home.
  3. Keep your gutters and downspouts clean.
  4. Install a sump pump or other drainage system in your basem*nt.
Jul 31, 2023

How to future proof your home for climate change? ›

The Climate-Proof Home
  1. Green roofs. ...
  2. Solar shading. ...
  3. Fit insect screens. ...
  4. Treat wooden doors, frames and sills, or switch to inherently resilient ones. ...
  5. Switch to water-efficient appliances. ...
  6. Green spaces. ...
  7. Harvest rainwater. ...
  8. Replace timber floors with concrete.

What year will global warming be a problem? ›

By 2100, the average U.S. temperature is projected to increase by about 3°F to 12°F, depending on emissions scenario and climate model. An increase in average temperatures worldwide implies more frequent and intense extreme heat events, or heat waves.

What 3 things can we do at home about climate change? ›

Actions for a healthy planet
  • Save energy at home. Much of our electricity and heat are powered by coal, oil and gas. ...
  • Change your home's source of energy. ...
  • Walk, bike or take public transport. ...
  • Switch to an electric vehicle. ...
  • Consider your travel. ...
  • Reduce, reuse, repair and recycle. ...
  • Eat more vegetables. ...
  • Throw away less food.

Can we live with climate change? ›

The most recent report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)—a group of hundreds of scientists working with the United Nations to analyze climate change research from around the world—names many serious risks brought on by the warming of our planet, but human extinction is not among them.

How to prepare your house for a hotter future? ›

Install external shutters or awnings that block the sun. Install interior blinds and curtains that block the sun. Here's a rundown of each option. New windows: Replacing your windows can cost tens of thousands of dollars, so unless they are already in need of repair, you may want to hold off on that option.

What not to do in global warming? ›

10 Ways to Stop Global Warming
  • Change a light. Replacing one regular light bulb with a compact fluorescent light bulb will save 150 pounds of carbon dioxide a year.
  • Drive less. ...
  • Recycle more. ...
  • Check your tires. ...
  • Use less hot water. ...
  • Avoid products with a lot of packaging. ...
  • Adjust your thermostat. ...
  • Plant a tree.

What are 3 ways in which global warming might affect your home state? ›

Those reports detail the existing and expected impacts of global warming in California. These include: Sea level rise, coastal flooding and coastal erosion. Approximately 85% of California's population live and work in coastal counties.

How can I make my home more climate friendly? ›

How To Make Eco-Friendly Changes At Home: 21 Green Ideas
  1. Reuse Plastics. ...
  2. Replace Plastics. ...
  3. Level Up To A Programmable Thermostat. ...
  4. Upgrade Your Toilet. ...
  5. Install A Bidet. ...
  6. Use “Green” Toilet Paper. ...
  7. Replace Paper Products With Reusables. ...
  8. Swap Out Toxic Cleaning Products.
May 25, 2023

Where will be the best place to live after climate change? ›

Sacramento, California is the best place to live for climate change in 2022. 60% of the top 10 places to live in the U.S. for climate change are in California.

How can I protect my family from climate change? ›

For example: eat less meat, drive less, buy locally and recycle. Talk with others about the importance of protecting our planet to protect our health. Slowing climate change requires all of us to take steps to reduce polluting energy sources such as fossil fuels and protect nature.

How much time does Earth have left? ›

Earth will interact tidally with the Sun's outer atmosphere, which would decrease Earth's orbital radius. Drag from the chromosphere of the Sun would reduce Earth's orbit. These effects will counterbalance the impact of mass loss by the Sun, and the Sun will likely engulf Earth in about 7.59 billion years from now.

How long until climate change makes Earth uninhabitable? ›

Although the Earth will still be within the habitable zone in 250 million years' time, the formation of a supercontinent with elevated CO2 will make most of the world uninhabitable for humans and other mammals. The findings show that only somewhere between 8 and 16 per cent of land would be habitable.

Will Earth be habitable in 2030? ›

But by the 2030s, as temperatures rise, climate hazards are expected to increase all over the globe as different countries face more crippling heat waves, worsening coastal flooding and crop failures, the report says.

How does climate change affect households? ›

Climate hazards can impact households' ability to manage losses, expenses, and transactions using financial products and services such as credit, insurance, and payments. Many households are unprepared for unexpected expenses and disruptions to income due to climate events and conditions.

How does climate change affect our living? ›

The impacts of climate change include warming temperatures, changes in precipitation, increases in the frequency or intensity of some extreme weather events, and rising sea levels. These impacts threaten our health by affecting the food we eat, the water we drink, the air we breathe, and the weather we experience.

Does heating your home contribute to climate change? ›

Heating and cooling our homes requires the most energy and significantly contributes to global carbon emissions. We can reduce the energy burden by setting the thermostat to a lower temperature in the winter and setting it to a higher temperature in the summer.

How do you address climate change in your home? ›

Explore our list of 10 simple steps you can take to reduce greenhouse gas emissions:
  1. Change five lights. ...
  2. Look for ENERGY STAR. ...
  3. Heat and cool smartly. ...
  4. Seal and insulate your home. ...
  5. Reduce, reuse, recycle. ...
  6. Use water efficiently. ...
  7. Be green in your yard. ...
  8. Purchase green power.
Sep 29, 2016

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