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Hurricane Helene (/ h ɛ ˈ l iː n / ⓘ heh-LEEN) [1] was a devastating tropical cyclone that caused widespread catastrophic damage and numerous fatalities across the Southeastern United States in late September 2024.
Hurricane Season Damage 1 3 Katrina: 2005: $125 billion 4 Harvey: 2017: 3 4 Helene: 2024: $120 billion 4 4 Ian: 2022: $113 billion 5 4 Maria: 2017: $90 billion 6 3 Milton: 2024: $85 billion 7 4 Ida: 2021: $75 billion 8 ET Sandy: 2012: $65 billion 9 4 Irma: 2017: $52.1 billion 10 2 Ike: 2008: $30 billion
The 2024 Atlantic hurricane season was a very active and extremely destructive Atlantic hurricane season which became the second costliest on record after 2017, [1] inflicting at least $227 billion in damages and 400 deaths overall, most of which was caused by four systems: Beryl, Debby, Helene, and Milton.
The 132-page bill includes 13 pages on Helene and the remainder on changes to authority of elected positions. Hurricane Helene made landfall in Florida on Sept. 26, a Thursday night, and soaked ...
Helene went on to cause between $225 and $250 billion in damage and economic loss, an estimate that includes the projected costs of repairing or completely rebuilding infrastructure, such as power ...
All told, CoreLogic calculates that Hurricane Helene caused between $30.5 billion and $47.5 billion in total wind and flood losses across 16 states. The firm said it does not plan to issue another ...
Four days after Hurricane Helene made landfall, the U.S., 1.6 million customers were still in the dark on Tuesday morning. The vast majority of that number are residents of the western Carolinas ...
Due to Spruce Pine being one of the few places in the world with "ultra-high quality" quartz mines essential for semiconductor production, damage from Helene was predicted to hamper global microchip supplies and technological supply chains if the town's quartz mines were damaged and shut down for long periods.