So.... what does PG&E filing for bankruptcy mean for Californians? Can some smart people on energy policy, insurance, climate, etc. respond to this below?https://twitter.com/EdLudlow/status/1062739216109514752 …
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To be fair to the people who live in Paradise and places like it, they weren't disaster prone when they moved there. there are 130-150M dead trees in CA from the last drought. A fire 20 years ago could be caught and put out fairly fast, today it burns a whole town in 60 mins.
yes. So people, individually, and people, collectively probably need to make different choices going forward.
scratch that, I more specifically mean areas prone to disasters on a very high frequency (as in more often than our 1X every 100-150 years major earthquakes).
Another difficult and fascinating question. I'd suggest the answer, in most cases, is less about whether we live in "disaster-prone" places and more about how we live there and whether we can cost-effectively prepare for and/or mitigate the risks.
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