Ecocentricity Blog: After the Storm
Feb 28, 2018 9:30 AM ET
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Ecocentricity Blog
Ecocentricity Blog: After the Storm
As of my writing this, it’s been 160 days. I’m tempted to play the “guess what I’m talking about game,” but it would be cruel to make you do the math. I’ll make it easy. It’s been 160 days since September 20, 2017, the day Hurricane Maria made landfall in Puerto Rico.
Here are some more numbers for you, all sourced from Wikipedia’s page on the storm.
- 4 – The category of the storm when it made landfall;
- 64 – Miles per hour of sustained wind speeds in San Juan at landfall;
- 113 – Miles per hour of wind gusts in San Juan at landfall;
- 37.9 – Maximum inches of rain received on the island;
- 15 – Maximum feet of flood water depth reported on the island;
- 780,000,000 – Estimated dollars of agricultural losses on the island, representing 80% of the territory’s agricultural yield at the time;
- 80,000 – The number of people in Puerto Rico without power BEFORE Maria struck, as a result of Hurricane Irma two weeks prior;
- 3,400,000 – The island’s approximate population, all of whom lost access to grid electricity in the storm;
- 88 – Percent of Puerto Rico’s population without power one month after the storm;
- 45 – Percent of Puerto Rico’s population without power three months after the storm.