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MODELLING
FUTURE HAWAIIAN HURRICANES, DAMAGE ASSESSMENT AND ECONOMIC
IMPACT SCENARIOS
PREFACE
AND NOTE TO THE READER
The
Office of State Planning has contracted the Social Science
Research Institute of the University of Hawaii to identify
and evaluate options for reducing the vulnerability of
the State to future hurricanes and to involve the public
in that process. In order to conduct this evaluation,
the project team will first attempt to evaluate a series
of mitigation options, many of which have already been
identified, in terms of their social and economic costs
and benefits. In order to conduct such an evaluation,
assumptions must be made about:
o
the probability of future storms in terms of their
frequency and severity;
o
the potential social and economic impact of future
storms of different degrees of severity;
o
the potential costs of the mitigation measures
being evaluated; and
o
the potential costs that might be avoided if the
mitigation measures are implemented.
In short,
assumptions must be developed about the possible cost
of damage from future storms in order to assess the potential
benefits of mitigation measures being evaluated. These
benefits can then be compared to the costs of the mitigation
measures themselves and decision-makers can determine
if the benefits outweigh the costs.
This
is one of two papers prepared by the OSP Coastal Hazard
Mitigation Planning Project to assist in the development
of assumptions about the risks and potential costs of
future hurricanes in the State of Hawaii. As will become
clear to readers of both papers, the nature of the hurricane
threat to Hawaii and the state of our knowledge about
the climate history of Hawaii do not lend themselves to
actuarial analysis. Moreover, historical information about
damage from past storms is of limited value in assessing
the potential damage of future hurricanes or tropical
storms on any single island. Therefore, the approach adopted
to estimate the potential costs of future storms in the
paper prepared by Dave Kennard was to guestimate the potential
impacts of a Hurricane Iwa type storm and a Hurricane
Iniki type storm on each of the counties in the State.
In order
to simulate the impact of an Iwa-type and an Iniki-type
storm in 1992, historical information on both storms was
used to determine percentages of damage and economic impact
in the areas struck. These percentages were calculated
in relation to the total number of houses, hotel room,
and commercial structure and levels of economic activity
at the time the storms struck. These percentages were
then applied to the number of different kinds of structures
and levels of economic activity in each of the counties
in 1992. Needless to say, these guestimates are very rough
and involved a whole series of assumptions which are discussed
in the paper. The assumptions and method of guestimation
for assent damage, economic loss, and the generation of
economic activity are contained in Appendix One of the
paper entitled Damage Assessment and Economic Impact Scenarios.
These
papers were presented to a focus group convened on July
21, 1993, that was asked to assist in developing assumptions
about the potential risks and cost of future storms. The
focus group was asked for comments, criticism, and suggestions
on the papers that resulted in revised drafts. However,
additional comments and suggestions will continue to be
welcome and should be sent to Director, Center for Development
Studies, Social Science Research Institute, Porteus Hall,
Room 719, University of Hawaii, Honolulu, Hawaii, 96822.
They can be sent by fax to the same office at (808) 956-2884.
Michael
P. Hamnett
Project
Director
INTRODUCTION
Tropical
cyclones are relatively infrequent but powerful disturbances
to life in Hawai'i. Their destructive power was clearly
demonstrated on September 11, 1992 when Hurricane Iniki
passed over the Hawaiian Islands and caused over $1.6
billion in property damage. The island of Kau'ai received
the brunt of the storm and all but $77 million of the
damage. Hawai'i's other recent encounter with a hurricane
was November 23 and 24, 1982, when Hurricane Iwa struck,
again focused on Kau'ai. The statewide estimate of damage
from Iwa was more than $234 million. Iwa was the first
hurricane to hit Hawai'i directly since Hurricane Dot
in 1959.
The
seven-fold difference in damage estimates between Iniki
and Iwa is due in part to the difference in the strength
of the storms, in part to the increased level and value
of development on Kau'ai over the ten years from 1982
to 1992, and in part to the path the storms took. The
eye of Iniki passed directly over western Kau'ai, while
Iwa's eye tracked several miles west of the island.
Kau'ai
was particularly unlucky to have taken the brunt of both
storms. Iniki has caused several statewide problems as
well, not the least of which are the near collapse of
the insurance industry and the impact on the state budget.
These problems would have been much worse if the storm
had struck one of the other islands.
To get
a sense of the negative economic impact of these destructive
storms and the potential benefits of various hazard mitigation
recommendations, this report presents the possible economic
impact of an Iniki-type and an Iwa-type hurricane striking
any single one of the counties of Hawai'i. The estimates
are confined to damage in the county and ignore the collateral
damage to adjacent counties. Damage reports from Hurricane
Iwa and Hurricane Iniki provide the basis for the estimation.
These reports include: Hurricane Iwa's Economic Impact
on Hawai'i, by the Governor's Ad Hoc Committee on
the Economic Impact of Hurricane Iwa, January 1983, and
Imua: Kau'ai Beyond Hurricane Iniki, by the Governor's
Economic Recovery Committee, January 1993. The underlying
data was drawn from the State of Hawai'i Data Book,
1992.
The
damage assessment and economic impacts provided in the
reports were merely the best estimates available at the
time the reports were prepared. However, within the context
of modeling the impact of a hypothetical storm, the data
are sufficient to provide the order of magnitude of the
storm's impact. It is also important to note that the
reports cover only the easily quantifiable physical asset
damage and economic impacts. They do not measure other
intangible costs such as the effects on plant and wild
life, the human suffering and the post-storm stress on
families, or other social costs.
The
report lists two sets of estimates. The first is damage
to private and public property. Private property is broken
down into residential (structures and personal property),
commercial (accommodations, visitor facilities and other
commercial property, and public utilities), and agriculture.
Public property is restricted to non-federal public property
and clean-up costs. The second set of estimates addresses
the income and employment effects. These focus on the
employment and income generated in the construction industry
during the rebuilding phase, and the employment and income
lost in the visitor industry.
ESTIMATED
ASSET DAMAGE
The
estimated total damage to private and public property
from an Iniki-type storm is listed in Table 1 and shown
in Graph 1. High and low estimates (+25% and -25%) are
also provided in Table 1. The estimated asset damage from
an Iniki-type storm striking only the City and County
of Honolulu is $18,658 million. If the storm were to strike
only the County of Maui instead, the estimated asset damage
is $3,598 million; and if it were to strike only the County
of Hawai'i, $3,520 million.
Table
2 lists the estimated total asset damage from an Iwa-type
storm. The estimated asset damage from an Iwa-type storm
striking only the City and County of Honolulu is $6,025
million. If it were to strike only the County of Maui
instead, the estimated damage is $1,135 million; if it
were to strike only the County of Hawai'i, $1,119 million;
and only the County of Kau'ai, $492 million. Graph 2 also
illustrates these losses.
A range
of + 25% is given with the total asset damage estimates.
This + 25% in our analysis accounts for various
factors which could alter the amount and pattern of destruction.
One important factor is the path of the storm. A difference
of a few miles to the east or west in the path of the
storm can have a large impact on the storm's damage. Likewise
the intensity of the storm and topographical features
-- e.g. whether a mountain range blocks and redirects
the wind, or funnels and accentuates it -- can also have
a big impact on the level of damage.
Other
estimates of the damage exist. One, done by a San Francisco-based
engineering firm, EQE International, estimated the damage
from Iniki
Graph
1 INIKI: ASSET DAMAGE
Graph
2 IWA: ASSET DAMAGE
directly
striking O'ahu at between $14 billion and $24 billion.
A Sedgwick Payne report estimated that damage from a storm
with 135-mph gusts striking O'ahu would be about $13.7
billion in insured Homeowners and Personal Fire losses.
A second study assumed the O'ahu exposure to be $42.75
billion and the Probable Maximum Loss to be 30%, and generated
an estimated hurricane loss of $12.8 billion. A third
study estimated the Homeowners, Dwelling Fire and Commercial
losses from an Iniki-type storm striking O'ahu to be $21.5
billion. One newspaper report cited a damage estimate
to O'ahu from an Iniki-type storm at $35 billion (110%
of the 1992 Gross Assessed Valuation of Improvements on
the island of O'ahu). Our + 25% range encompasses
most of the estimates made to date.
There
are several reasons to believe that our damage estimate
for the City and County of Honolulu is an underestimate.
Federal property is not included in the damage estimate.
Pearl Harbor Naval Base, Hickam Air Force Base, Barber's
Point Naval Air Station, Schofield Barracks, Wheeler Air
Force Base, and Kaneohe Marine Corps Air Station, among
others, will suffer damage and will be the responsibility
of the federal government. Hurricane damage to Federal
property will, however, have a large spill-over effect
on the Hawaiian economy, as the military provides a major
source of employment and income generation.
The
pattern of a tropical cyclone in the northern hemisphere
means that the northeastern edge of the storm has the
most powerful winds. If the storm were to go over the
center of the island of O'ahu, the downtown and Waikiki
areas, as well as Kaneohe and Kailua, would be hit by
this intense northeast edge. It is likely that the damage
intensity ratios on O'ahu would be higher than the Kau'ai
average ratios used in the analysis.
Similarly,
the extremely high winds such a storm would create would
be forced between the tall buildings downtown and in Waikiki,
creating areas of low pressure and pulling out windows
and furnishings. This would cause more damage than was
experienced on Kau'ai. And since businesses in Honolulu
may be more technologically dependent than those on Kau'ai,
the loss of power and communications may have a bigger
impact.
Finally,
the initial stage of recovery may be longer on O'ahu.
Kau'ai was fortunate that it had the resources and infrastructure
of O'ahu nearby to provide immediate assistance and to
act as a staging area for supplying the recovery. A post-hurricane
O'ahu would not be so fortunate. Almost everything would
have
to be flown in from the West Coast, five hours away, or
shipped, requiring several days. The immediate recovery
would be much slower.
On the
other hand, one reason to believe that the damage levels
in this analysis for the City and County of Honolulu might
be overestimated is that many of the buildings in the
downtown and Waikiki areas have been engineered and constructed
to higher standards than those on Kau'ai. These would
then suffer less structural damage and therefore require
less costly repairs.
GAINS
TO ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
Reconstructing
the structural damage (to residential structures, visitors
accommodations, and other business damage) will require
mostly skilled construction labor for repairs. This enormous
task will provide substantial employment opportunities
for the various Counties and the State work force. Much
of the cost of reconstruction will be borne by entities
outside of Hawai'i (to the degree that the Federal Government
and private insurance companies can and will absorb the
damage costs). In the short run reconstruction will be
an injection of funds into the Hawaiian economy, offsetting
some of the economic losses.
It is
important to remember that there is an opportunity cost
to the work and income generated from the repair of hurricane
damage. The workers repairing structures are not building
new ones. No new income is generated unless previously
unemployed workers are employed in the hurricane recovery,
or unless workers are working "overtime" to
meet the higher demand. The marginal gain is small.
The
first half of Table 3 lists the construction repair work
(to residential structures, visitor accommodations, and
other businesses damaged) estimated for both storms. For
the Iniki-type storm, the value ranges from $12 billion
on O'ahu to $1 billion on Kau'ai; for the Iwa-type storm,
the damage estimates range from $3.6 billion on O'ahu
to $300 million on Kau'ai.
The
total value of construction in the State in 1991 was $3.3
billion, as shown in the bottom half of Table 3. The General
Excise tax base for construction was $4.3 billion. The
construction industry provided 33,500 jobs statewide in
1991, so approximately $129,400 of the construction tax
base supported each job.
Table
4 lists the building work force requirements after the
storm. Reconstruction of the City and County of Honolulu
after an Iniki-type storm would require an estimated 92,600
workers. This is more than 3.5 times the existing County
work force. If the entire State construction work force
could be applied to the reconstruction, the required time
is approximately 2.75 years. After an Iwa-type storm,
reconstruction of the City and County of Honolulu would
require an estimated 28,400 workers to repair the damage,
slightly more than the County work force. The entire State
construction work force would require slightly less than
one year to complete the repairs. Similarly, the reconstruction
demand exceeds the availability of local workers in other
counties.
In 1991
the average annual wage in the construction industry was
$37,800. Table 4 lists the wage income generated by the
post-storm reconstruction work. After an Iniki-type storm,
the range is from $3,500 million on O'ahu (over + 3 years)
to $298 million on Kau'ai (over one to six years, depending
on the degree to which workers from the other Counties
find work on Kau'ai). After an Iwa-type storm, the range
is from $1,429 million on O'ahu to $125 million on Kau'ai.
The
long recovery times are in part determined by the relatively
small labor force. One way to speed up the recovery process
is to import workers, or to shift unemployed workers over
from the service industries suffering significant hurricane
damage. Unfortunately, there are limits on the ability
of workers from outside the state and workers unemployed
in other industries to supplement the pool of construction
workers. The post-storm housing shortage makes it difficult
to accommodate outside construction workers, and workers
in other industries often lack the skills required. Both
factors reduce the absorption rate. A shortage of building
materials will also slow reconstruction. In addition,
there will be a substantial opportunity cost of construction
foregone as resources are transferred to the post-hurricane
reconstruction effort.
LOSSES
TO ECONOMIC ACTIVITY
The
visitor industry dominates the Hawaiian economy, and it
is where the disruption caused by a hurricane will have
its biggest impact. Table 5 lists the annual and monthly
visitor expendituresfor each county. Table 6 lists by
county the economic activity that is generated by visitor
expenditures. Each month in 1991 visitors to Honolulu
on average spent $493 million, generating $871 million
in total sales, $294 million in income and $55 million
in tax revenue. In Maui County they spent on average $218
million per month, generating $386 million in total sales,
$130 million in income and $24 million in tax revenue;
in Hawai'i County they spent $100 million, generating
$178 million in total sales, $60 million in income and
$11 million in tax revenue; and in Kau'ai County they
spent $102 million, generating $180 million in total sales,
$61 million in income and $11 million in tax revenue.
These figures represent the potential losses for each
month after the storm in which no tourists arrive.
Table
7 lists loss estimates in the tourist industry during
the first year after the hypothetical storms used in the
analysis. For the Iniki-type storm, tourism is assumed
to return to 75% of the pre-storm level in the fourth
quarter after the storm. In the Iwa case, tourism recovers
by the third quarter after the storm. Graph 3 illustrates
the losses in tourism sales for each of the four counties
in the case of Iwa-type and Iniki-type storms.
During
the year after an Iniki-type storm the City and County
of Honolulu would lose $6,534 million in sales from decreased
tourism, $2,206 million in income and the County and State
would lose $411 million in tax revenue. The County of
Maui would lose $2,895 million in sales, $978 million
in income and the County and State would lose $182 million
in tax revenue. The County of Hawai'i would lose $1,332
million in sales, $450 million in income and the County
and State would lose $84 million in tax revenue. The County
of Kau'ai would lose $1,349 million in sales, $455 million
in income and the County and State would lose $85 million
in tax revenue. The losses from an Iwa-type storm would
be approximately 40% of the Iniki losses. Graph 4 illustrates
the potential losses in tax revenue for each of the four
counties in the case of Iwa-type and Iniki-type storms.
State
and County tax collection in 1991 was $3,333.6 million.
The losses from an Iniki-type storm striking O'ahu would
reduce tax collections by about one-eighth, or 12%.
Graph
3 LOST TOURISM SALES IN IWA-TYPE AND INIKI-TYPE
STORM SCENARIOS
Graph
4 LOST TAX REVENUE IN IWA-TYPE AND INIKI-TYPE
STORM SCENARIOS
The
statewide effects from the loss of tourism in this analysis
are probably overstated in the case of the Counties of
Maui, Hawai'i and Kau'ai. Tourists whose vacation plans
have been disrupted by a hurricane are likely to go to
one of the other islands. For example, at the time of
Hurricane Iniki the number of unoccupied rooms on the
other islands was greater than the number of occupied
rooms on Kau'ai, and tourists could easily switch to one
of the undamaged resort areas. Indications are that Maui
and Hawai'i have enjoyed an increase in tourism as a result
of this tourist displacement since Iniki.
The
statewide effect of the hypothetical storms used in this
analysis has probably been understated for the City and
County of Honolulu. Tourists who come to Waikiki may be
less likely to go to the other islands; given extensive
damage to the airport and the need to fly in relief supplies,
getting to the other islands may be problematic. Also
considering the negative publicity from the news reports
of the hurricane damage to Honolulu, it would not be surprising
to see decreased tourism on the other islands.
Potential
unemployment and job losses are difficult to estimate.
Employers may choose to maintain workers in the short
run, especially if they expect to recover quickly. Likewise,
workers may exit the work force (to work on their own
house, or leave the county) or find employment in one
of the recovery-driven industries (construction or government).
However, estimates from Kau'ai indicate that an Iniki-type
storm would cause a first quarter job loss of about half
of those jobs supported by the tourist industry. This
would decline to about 15% in the fourth quarter.
Potential
losses in the tourist industry would be partially offset
by gains in the construction industry and in government
supported recovery employment. The estimates of the net
effect on Kau'ai after Iniki indicate an employment rate
of 25% in the first quarter after the storm falling to
10% in the fourth quarter after the storm. Graph 5 shows
that in the City and County of Honolulu this would translate
into a loss of 111,300 jobs in the first quarter and 44,500
in the fourth; in the County of Maui it would translate
into 14,300 jobs in the first quarter and 5,700 in the
fourth; in the County of Hawai'i it would translate into
15,000 jobs in the first quarter and 6,000 in the fourth;
and in the County of Kau'ai it would translate into 7,200
jobs in the first quarter and 2,900 in the fourth.
After
an Iwa-type storm the tourist industry losses would be
much smaller, and probably more temporary than those after
an Iniki-type storm. The
Graph
5 POTENTIAL JOB LOSS IN AN INIKI-TYPE STORM
SCENARIO
estimate
of the statewide job loss after Hurricane Iwa was slightly
smaller than the job gain in the construction industry.
There would be some initial dislocation after the storm,
but no net loss in employment, with perhaps even a small
gain.
CONCLUSIONS
Estimates
of the economic losses from an Iwa-type and an Iniki-type
storms are summarized in Table 8. While these guestimates
are based on a whole series of assumptions about storm
damage in each of the counties, they give some sense
of the levels of damage that might be possible. As discussed
the above, there are compelling reasons to believe that
the losses from a direct hit of an Iniki-type storm
on Honolulu could yield economic losses that are much
higher.
The
analysis contained in this paper focused on potential
damage from only two types of storms. As indicated in
the first paper in this series on the hurricane history
of Hawaii, damage can also be expected from storms of
both lower intensity and ones which do not pass so near
or directly over one of the inhabited islands of the
State. Therefore, in considering the potential for future
hurricane and tropical storm damage, readers are reminded
that the scenarios analyzed here are only two among
many that could be derived from the climate history
of Hawaii.
APPENDIX
This
report presents estimates of the potential economic impact
of an Iniki-type storm and an Iwa-type storm striking
each of the counties of Hawaii. The modeling of the potential
hurricane damage rests on the assumptions that the overall
damage patterns resemble those on Kau'ai after Iwa and
Iniki, and that the estimates of damage from Iniki and
Iwa are applicable. From these and other data, primarily
from the current State Data Book, estimates of
asset damage and economic impacts have been generated.
While
it is impossible to calculate precisely how a hurricane
might affect a specific area, the differences in storm
characteristics are too wide and there is too much variability
in topological and structural features, the estimates
are still useful. They give a sense of the order of magnitude
of the potential destruction and allow for the preliminary
evaluation of effectiveness of policy recommendations.
A brief
description of how the estimates were calculated follows.
The asset damage estimates are presented first, followed
by the estimates of the economic impacts.
ASSET
DAMAGE
Residential
Property
The
American Red Cross surveyed the damage to residential
units shortly after both storms. The "street sheets"
rated every house on every street with damage on a scale
of: 0 = no damage; 1 = minor damage; 2 = major damage;
and 3 = destroyed. The results were tabulated, and the
category counts formed part of the basis for Federal Emergency
Management Agency (FEMA) reports and action.
The
island-wide percentage of damage to the stock of residential
units by storm and by classification is:
Iniki
Iwa
Destroyed
8% 3%
Major
damage 30% 9%
Minor
damage 41% 18%
-----
-----
TOTAL
79% 30%
In both
storms about 10% of residential units suffering damage
were destroyed. In Iniki a higher proportion suffered
major damage (37% to 30%), while a smaller proportion
suffered minor damage (51% to 60%).
The
value of the damage was estimated to be:
Destroyed
$168,666 (the 1991 average estimated value of
a new
single family home on Oahu)
Major
damage $ 35,000 (the estimated amount used on the
American
Red Cross street sheets)
Minor
damage $ 1,000 (used in the Imua report)
The
damage ratios and values were applied to the housing stock
in each county as of April 1, 1992,
Count
of Housing Units (4/1/92)
Honolulu
288,805
Maui
45,941
Hawai'i
53,421
Kau'ai
19,439
to construct
the residential structure damage estimates in each county
for both storms. The Imua study reported the estimated
damage to personal property to be approximately 45% of
the estimated structural damage, so the residential asset
damage estimates are:
RESIDENTIAL
ASSET DAMAGE, BY COUNTY & BY STORM
(in
$ millions)
Iniki
Iwa
Structures
Pers Prop Structures Pers Prop
Honolulu
$ 7,046 m $ 3,171 m $ 2,422 m $ 1,090 m
Maui
$ 1,211 m $ 504 m $ 385 m $ 173 m
Hawai'i
$ 1,303 m $ 587 m $ 448 m $ 202 m
Kau'ai
$ 474 m $ 213 m $ 163 m $ 73 m
Commercial
Property
The
Imua study divided commercial property into three
subgroups: visitor facilities and infrastructure; non-visitor
facilities; and public utilities. Visitor facilities and
infrastructure was further divided into accommodations
and non-accommodations. There was no separate grouping
for industrial property.
The
estimated damage to visitor accommodations from Iniki
was based on a survey of Kau'ai's visitor rooms for the
Hawaii Hotel Association by PKF-Hawaii which found 54%
of the 7,616 surveyed to be damaged at an average value
of $75,600 per room. These were applied to the count of
visitor accommodations as of Spring, 1992 to estimate
damage:
VISITOR
ACCOMMODATION DAMAGE AFTER AN INIKI-TYPE STORM
Total
Units Damaged Cost
Honolulu
37,279 20,131 $1,522 m
Maui
19,552 10,558 $ 798 m
Hawai'i
9,170 4,952 $ 374 m
Kau'ai
7,778 4,200 $ 318 m
Table
600 of the 1993 Data Book lists a decline of 954
visitor accommodation units on Kau'ai in 1983, the year
after Iwa (pre-Iwa = 5,147, post-Iwa = 4,193). The 18.5%
decline is the estimate for an Iwa-type storm:
VISITOR
ACCOMMODATION DAMAGE AFTER AN IWA-TYPE STORM
Total
Units Damaged Cost
Honolulu
37,279 6,897 $ 521 m
Maui
19,552 3,617 $ 273 m
Hawai'i
9,170 1,696 $ 128 m
Kau'ai
7,778 1,439 $ 109 m
The
estimated damage to non-accommodations after Iniki was
based on a survey of 128 visitor related businesses on
Kau'ai by Harry Spiegelberg & Associates for DBEDT.
The estimated overall damage per employee was $10,500.
DBEDT also used this estimate to construct the estimated
damage to the non-visitor facilities. The two categories
are merged into "Visitor & other facilities"
and the estimated damage is the damage per employee times
the number of non-agriculture, non-government employees
in each county:
NON-VISITOR
ACCOMMODATION DAMAGE
AFTER
AN INIKI-TYPE STORM
(non-agriculture
& non-government jobs in $ millions)
Job
Count Damage
Honolulu
325,300 $ 3,416 m
Maui
43,800 $ 460 m
Hawai'i
38,750 $ 407 m
Kau'ai
21,650 $ 227 m
The
Hurricane Iwa report lists total business damage at $63.9
million, $11.5 million of which was to public utilities,
and $0.9 million was on Maui and Hawaii. Approximately
87% of the damage occurred on Kau'ai, and of the $41.5
million in non-public utility damage, "most of the
business damage appears to have been suffered by visitor
industry facilities on Kau'ai, which have not as yet been
comprehensively surveyed for valuation of damages."
If the same ratio of damage to accommodations occurred
as with Iniki, there was $17.3 million in damage. Given
the 12,250 non-agriculture, non-government workers on
Kau'ai in 1982, the damage per employee is $1,400, or
adjusted for inflation, $2,250. (CPI rose 159.6% from
1982 to 1992.) The estimated non-accommodation damage
from an Iwa-type storm by county is:
NON-VISITOR
ACCOMMODATION DAMAGE AFTER AN IWA-TYPE STORM
(non-agriculture
& non-government jobs in $ millions)
Jobcount
Damage
Honolulu
325,300 $ 732 m
Maui
43,800 $ 99 m
Hawai'i
38,750 $ 87 m
Kau'ai
21,650 $ 49 m
Iniki
caused a reported $139 million in damage to public utilities.
Using the number of electric utility customers as a proxy
for the measure of public utility property, the damage
per customer was $281,000. The estimated public utility
damage by county is:
PUBLIC
UTILITY DAMAGE AFTER AN INIKI-TYPE STORM
($
millions)
Customers
Damage
Honolulu
255,176 $1,484 m
Maui
48,519 $ 282 m
Hawai'i
53,351 $ 316 m
Kau'ai
23,917 $ 139 m
The
State-wide estimated damage to public utilities after
Iwa was $11.5 million. Assuming the same Kau'ai share
as with other business damage (87%), the cost per customer
was $55,000 times the inflation factor (159.6%) yields
the estimated cost per customer of $88,000, and an estimated
public utility damage by county of:
PUBLIC
UTILITY DAMAGE AFTER AN IWA-TYPE STORM
($
millions)
Customers
Damage
Honolulu
255,176 $ 225 m
Maui
48,519 $ 43 m
Hawai'i
53,351 $ 48 m
Kau'ai
23,917 $ 21 m
Non-Federal
Government Property
The
damage to non-federal government property is assumed to
be proportional to number of non-federal government employees.
Iniki caused $67 million in damage to State and County
property, or $21,000 per worker. The estimated damage
by county is:
NON-FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT DAMAGE
AFTER
AN INIKI-TYPE STORM
($
millions)
Workers
Damage
Honolulu
57,600 $1,210 m
Maui
5,900 $ 124 m
Hawai'i
8,300 $ 174 m
Kau'ai
3,200 $ 67 m
Iwa
caused 24.9 million in damage to State and County property:
$6 million to the County of Kau'ai, $0.8 million to the
City and County of Honolulu; and $18.1 million to the
State. If the State damage is proportioned as the County
damage, the total damage on Kau'ai was $22 million (88%),
and the damage per employee was $8,600 times the inflation
adjustment, or $13,800. The estimated damage by county
is:
NON-FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT DAMAGE
AFTER
AN IWA-TYPE STORM
($
millions)
Workers
Damage
Honolulu
57,600 $ 795 m
Maui
5,900 $ 81 m
Hawai'i
8,300 $ 115 m
Kau'ai
3,200 $ 44 m
Agriculture
Property
The
Agriculture losses from Iniki were estimated to be $78
million, or 138% of the 1991 market value of crop and
livestock sales in Kau'ai. The estimated damage to agriculture
property by county is:
AGRICULTURE
LOSSES AFTER AN INIKI-TYPE STORM
($
millions)
Market
Sales Damage
Honolulu
$ 170.7 m $ 236 m
Maui
$ 144.4 m $ 200 m
Hawai'i
$ 182.5 m $ 252 m
Kau'ai
$ 56.4 m $ 78 m
The
agricultural crop losses on Kau'ai were $14.9 million.
The reported state-wide damage to agricultural structures
was $5.2 million. If they are proportioned as crop losses,
the total agricultural losses on Kau'ai are $19.4, or
32% of the market value of crop and livestock sales in
1982 ($60.5 million). The damage estimate by county is:
AGRICULTURE
LOSSES AFTER AN IWA-TYPE STORM
($
millions)
Market
Sales Damage
Honolulu
$ 170.7 m $ 55 m
Maui
$ 144.4 m $ 46 m
Hawai'i
$ 182.5 m $ 59 m
Kau'ai
$ 56.4 m $ 18 m
Clean-up
Costs
The
final item is the clean-up cost. After Iniki the clean-up
cost was an estimated $48 million, or 3.2% of the asset
damage estimate. The estimated clean-up cost and total
damage estimates are:
INIKI:
CLEAN-UP COSTS AND TOTAL DAMAGE
($
millions)
Subtotal
Clean-up Total
Honolulu
$18,085 $ 573 $18,658 m
Maui
$ 3,489 $ 110 $ 3,599 m
Hawai'i
$ 3,413 $ 108 $ 3,521 m
Kau'ai
$ 1,516 $ 48 $ 1,564 m
IWA:
CLEAN-UP COSTS AND TOTAL DAMAGE
($
millions)
Subtotal
Clean-up Total
Honolulu
$ 5,840 $ 185 $ 6,025 m
Maui
$ 1,100 $ 35 $ 1,135 m
Hawai'i
$ 1,087 $ 34 $ 1,121 m
Kau'ai
$ 477 $ 15 $ 492 m
ECONOMIC
IMPACTS
Construction
Repair
It is
assumed that most of the structural damage (residential,
accommodations and other businesses) will require mostly
skilled construction labor for repairs. To determined
the labor needs for the repair work, the current construction
value per worker is needed. This ratio is the 1991 General
excise tax base for contracting ($4,334 million) divided
by the 1991 state-wide jobcount in the contract construction
industry (33,500), or $129,373. The structural damage
totals are divided by the construction value per workder
to calculate the number of workers needed, and then multiplied
by the average annual wage ($37,791) to calculate the
estimated total wages, assuming the number of workers
were employed for a year.
It is
important point to remember that there is an opportunity
cost to the work and income generated from the structural
repairs of hurricane damage. The workers replacing structures
are not building new ones. No new income is generated
unless previously unemployed workers are now employed
in the repair work, or unless workers are working "overtime"
to meet the higher demand.
Visitor
Industry Losses
To calculate
the impact on the visitor industry, it was assumed that
tourism returns after the storm, slower after an Iniki-type
storm, and faster after an Iwa-type storm. The percentage
of 1991 tourist expenditures by quarter after the storm
is assumed to be:
1st
Q 2nd Q 3rd Q 4th Q
Iniki
0% 25% 50% 75%
Iwa
25% 75% 100% 100%
The
estimated annual expeditures and related data can be calculated
as the sum of the products of the recovery rate coeffecients
and the average monthly amounts for visitor expenditure,
total expenditure, total sales, inomce and tax revenue.
The difference between the estimated visitor expenditures
and the actual 1991 is the estimated lost expenditures.
Employment
Effects
The
Imua report indicates that the estimated increase
in unemployment rises to 25% in the first quarter and
declining to 10% by the end of the year after an Iniki-type
storm. However, recent reports from the Department of
Labor and Industrial Relations suggest that the initial
rise in unemployment might be less, approximately 16%.
It still appears that the unemployment rate will be at
least as high as 10% a year after the storm.
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