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Title: Yet Another Trillion-Dollar Unfunded Liability, California Wildfires Edition
Source: [None]
URL Source: https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018 ... y-california-wildfires-edition
Published: Nov 11, 2018
Author: Tyler Durden
Post Date: 2018-11-11 15:17:57 by Horse
Keywords: None
Views: 130
Comments: 6

Yesterday an entire California town burned down. Paridise, CA has (had) 27,000 residents and over 1,000 buildings, and now it’s pretty much gone. A fire started nearby on a windy day and within hours everything was ash and cinders.

That fire and several others are still expanding across the state, threatening tens of thousands of homes. The sets of the TV show WestWorld are gone. Malibu has been evacuated. And dry, windy conditions persist, so the story is nowhere near over.

If this sounds familiar, it’s because massive, sometimes uncontrollable California wildfires are now an annual occurrence, due in part to gradual warming and persistent drought which combine to suck the moisture out of vegetation and turn the landscape into a tinderbox. Here’s a chart showing the recent take-off in the number of fires reported in the state (2013 was most recent year I could find, but the trend is clear – and since then the number of fires has apparently soared).

The reason this rates coverage in a financial blog is population. We’ve been moving millions of people into a place that has always had and always will have wildfires. California’s population is now about four times what it was in 1950, and the influx continues.

Fire is a crucial part of that and many other ecosystems, clearing out dead plants to make room for living. But add 40 million humans along with their buildings and vehicles, and a healthy, resilient semi-desert becomes a hellscape.

A very expensive hellscape. What does it cost to rebuild a town of 27,000 people from scratch? A back-of-the-envelope calculation (1,000 buildings at $100,000 a pop, 15,000 cars at $25,000 per, $10,000 per person for roads, sewers, landscaping, etc) yields several hundred million dollars. For one little town.

Is California budgeting for this? Are the insurance companies? Is Washington? All probably say they are, but only the insurance companies actually are – and even they are probably under-reserved for the past few years’ natural disasters.

This is a massive public planning failure, and yet another unfunded liability – that is, a future cost incurred but not saved for – to go alongside public pensions, government debt and multiplying environmental time bombs.

The result: A future of unpleasant surprises, in which governments are constantly saying “Oops, there’s this huge new expense that no one could have foreseen, and we’re all going to have to tighten our belts to cover it, sorry about the bad roads and closed libraries” – or – “Oops, there’s a huge unforeseen expense and we’re going to have to create a trillion new dollars to cover it, sorry about the inflation.”

But isn’t this mostly a private sector issue, between homeowner and insurance company, you ask? In many cases that’s true. But insurance companies have to make a profit, which means homeowner policy premiums have to be high enough to cover expected losses. As the latter rise, so necessarily do the former. Which means the part of our cost of living that’s devoted to insurance will soar as a direct result of California’s asleep-at-the-switch population management policy.

Are California wildfires as big an unfunded liability as the one resulting from the Right Coast’s soaring Hurricane Alley population? Probably not, because fires, even big ones, are smaller than tropical storms. Still, it could easily exceed a trillion dollars (let’s see what today’s fires end up costing) which – hitting a state that’s already overburdened with unfunded pensions and crumbling infrastructure – will probably end up being added to the federal government’s balance sheet via some kind of bail-out.

All of which makes a currency reset that much more likely in the not too distant future. Paying off this mountain of debts, promises and “guaranteed surprises” with current dollars is mathematically impossible. But after a 70% devaluation the numbers might work.


Poster Comment:

But liberals don't clear the brush. More than 25 people died in the Oakland Hills fires due to no brush clearing. That was about 30 years ago.

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#1. To: Horse (#0)

Thank BJ Clintoon for stopping the Forest Service from keeping our forests from become the tinderboxes they now are.

Maybe Trump will restore some sanity there.

“The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable.” ~ H. L. Mencken

Lod  posted on  2018-11-11   16:26:52 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Horse (#0)

How much $$ has Kali spent on that damned train boondoggle? There's the hole in that state's budget next to social welfare spending for the turd-world bums.

“With the exception of Whites, the rule among the peoples of the world, whether residing in their homelands or settled in Western democracies, is ethnocentrism and moral particularism: they stick together and good means what is good for their ethnic group."
-Alex Kurtagic

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X-15  posted on  2018-11-11   16:33:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: X-15, Lod (#2)

St Louis had a similar train boondoggle but on a smaller scale. Whites in the suburbs vetoed it when they realized blacks from the ghetto could board en masse and flood their town with thugs and shoplifters.

The Truth of 911 Shall Set You Free From The Lie

Horse  posted on  2018-11-11   19:34:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Horse (#3)

Whites in the suburbs vetoed it when they realized blacks from the ghetto could board en masse and flood their town with thugs and shoplifters.

A few years back the blacks in Milwaukee said, "Don't burn down our shit. Let's go out to the suburbs and burn down their shit." ;)

"When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke

BTP Holdings  posted on  2018-11-11   19:41:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Horse (#0)

I worked for the Dept of the Interior, in CA, in the 70's and 80's. We did controlled burns every year. we convinced the fed and state forest service to do the same, wild fires were reduced by 40% to 50%. In the mid 80's, Reagan admin, the EPA put in rules that made it almost impossible to have control burns.

Darkwing  posted on  2018-11-12   9:26:58 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Horse (#0) (Edited)

Is California budgeting for this? Are the insurance companies? Is Washington? All probably say they are


[CAFR] Comprehensive annual financial report || Differences between a general budget and a CAFR - Wikipedia

The primary difference between a budget and a CAFR is: a budget is a plan for a specific fiscal period (often a year) primarily showing where tax income is to be allocated. The CAFR contains the results of the period (year) with previous years accumulations. A CAFR shows the total of all financial accounting that a general purpose budget reports does not. The CAFR contains a section that provides a comparison of period budget and actual. Additionally, the CAFR gives a detailed showing of investment accounts by category reflecting balances over previous years, or in plain language using [an] example in comparison would be: the difference between Your house Budget for [one] year vs your [lifespanning] statement of "Net Worth"


Walter J. Burien, Jr - Welcomes you to CAFR1.com - "Collective" Government's massive and True Wealth Exposed!


The CAFR Swindle - The Biggest Game In Town - YouTube, 15 minutes


How Government Finance REALLY works - the CAFR - We Were DUPED - YouTube, 8.75 minutes

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"They're on our left, they're on our right, they're in front of us, they're behind us...they can't get away this time." -- Col. Puller, USMC

GreyLmist  posted on  2018-11-12   14:59:11 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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