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From Heat to Hurricanes to Historic Wildfire: New Texas Report Turns Lessons from 2024 into a Readiness Playbook

Texas storm

A new report from Barcus Arenas translates Texas’s punishing 2024 weather season into a practical preparedness playbook for households, businesses, and local governments. The analysis documents a year defined by record-setting heat, a deadly 100 mph derecho, Hurricane Beryl’s multi-billion-dollar impacts, and the Smokehouse Creek Fire’s million-acre burn, and then outlines how Texans can prepare for a future in which such extremes are increasingly routine.

Texas, with 31,290,831 residents spread across 268,596 square miles, sits at the confluence of multiple hazard regimes: Gulf cyclones, Central Plains wind events, Hill Country flash floods, Panhandle wildfire, and statewide heat waves. The study frames 2024 not as an outlier but as a stress test and a template for resilient planning.

2024 in Focus

Metro Impact Snapshots

The Long Arc: 1980–2024

Texas has weathered 190 billion-dollar disasters since 1980, the most in the South. The five-year average has jumped from 4.2 per year (1980–2024) to 13.6 (2020–2024). Regionally, the South mirrors the shift: Florida (160), Louisiana (110), and Tennessee (116) have all climbed sharply, and the Southeast average rose to 13.2 events per year from under five in earlier decades. In 2024, the U.S. logged 27 billion-dollar disasters, near a national record.

The Readiness Playbook

The report’s centerpiece is an action list keyed to Texas’s most common hazards:

For Everyone (All Hazards)

Wind/Hurricane/Tornado

Flood/Flash Flood

Wildfire

Heat

Despite rising risks, Americans remain underprepared: only 48% have supplies, and 39% have a written plan. “Preparedness can’t be an afterthought anymore in Texas,” the report states. “It’s a daily discipline, like locking your door or fastening a seatbelt.

Why Preparedness Pays

About This Report
This report compiles publicly available figures on Texas’s 2024 extreme weather impacts, historic billion-dollar disaster counts, and nationally recognized preparedness guidance, organized into a practical framework for Texas households and communities.

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