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Home » The climate threat to American infrastructure accelerates
Business & Money

The climate threat to American infrastructure accelerates

Stacey D. WallsBy Stacey D. WallsJuly 1, 2025No Comments
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The American infrastructure barely obtains a passing note, and one of the fastest growth problems is climate change. Airports are floods, bridges found in extreme heat and telecommunications are criticized by increasingly extreme weather conditions.

In 2023, at Fort Lauderdale / Hollywood international airport, historical precipitation transformed the tracks into rivers, closing operations and exchanging passengers. In New York last summer, extreme heat caused metal on a deck on the Harlem river to develop so much that the bridge was opened.

Each category of American infrastructure is increasingly in danger of climate change – a conclusion from the American Society of Civil Engineers, which trains engineers and informs the codes of the federal, state and local building.

Asce’s latest infrastructure report gave a “C” note to the country, claiming that climate -related challenges are widespread, even affecting regions previously resistant to these events.

“We continue to see more extreme meteorological events, therefore our infrastructure, on several occasions, has not been designed for these types of activities,” said Tom Smith, executive director of Asce, adding that this will only get worse.

“Whether it’s ice, snow, drought, heat, obviously, hurricanes, tornadoes, we have to design for all this, and we have to anticipate not only where the washer is, but where we think it goes,” said Smith.

The sectors with the worst notes include airports, power and telecommunications infrastructure. CNBC asked First Street, a climate risk analysis company, to superimpose its risk modeling on these specific national places. He found that 19% of all electricity infrastructure, 17% of telecommunications infrastructure and 12% of airports present a major risk of flood, wind or forest fires.

Most American infrastructure was built decades ago, and therefore designed for a climate that no longer exists. This has a direct impact on investors in the infrastructure space.

Sarah Kapnick, former chief scientist of the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and now Global Head of Climate Advisory JPMorgan Chase, According to its customers, its customers are increasingly questioning the climate impact on their investments.

“How should I change and invest in my infrastructure? How should I think about the differences in my infrastructure, my infrastructure construction? Should I think about insurance, different types of insurance? How should I access the capital markets to do this type of work?” Kapnick said.

Kapnick and Smith said that the manufacture of infrastructure climate resilients came to science.

“The climate and science are something that we take very, very seriously, working with science, by connecting it to engineering to protect public health, security and well-being,” said Smith.

But this science is attacked, seeing deep cuts of the Trump administration, which dismissed hundreds of employees at the NOAA, FEMA and the National Institute of Standards and Technology – Key government agencies that advance climate science.

“There will be this adjustment period because people discover where they will get the information they need, because many market decisions or financial decisions are based on certain data sets which, according to people, are still there,” said Kapnick.

The country’s infrastructure also needs funding. ASCE believes that there is a spending difference of 3.7 billions of dollars over the next 10 years to bring American infrastructure to a state of good condition.

The Trump administration discounts to spend so far include FEMA order to cancel the infrastructure and resilient communities of nearly $ 1 billion, which was specifically aimed at reducing damage caused by future natural disasters.

accelerates American climate infrastructure threat
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Stacey D. Walls

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