In Hawaii, concerns over 'climate gentrification' rise after devastating Maui fires
"When you step into the house, it's like an inch or two of ash. There is nothing," she said, adding that she hopes to stay and rebuild her home and destroyed business and is in touch with the insurance company.
More than 3,000 buildings in
With a housing crisis that has priced out many Native Hawaiians as well as families that have been there for decades, concerns are rising that the state could become the latest example of "climate gentrification," when it becomes harder for local people to afford housing in safer areas after a climate-amped disaster.
It's a term
Thompson said
Thompson predicted potential developers and investors will research who has mortgages and said
Thompson said she supports that "wholeheartedly." But she acknowledged some people won't be able to afford to rebuild and will want to sell their land.
While one extreme weather event cannot be entirely blamed on climate change, experts say storms, fires and floods, which are becoming more damaging in a warming world, help make
According to an analysis of
Until now, when homeowners in
Tyndall said the Native Hawaiian community has been hit the hardest by the housing crisis and there has been a "huge exodus" due to this lack of affordable housing.
The Indigenous-led NDN Collective issued a statement supporting community-led rebuilding for
With wildfires, areas that don't burn become more desirable, changing cost of living considerably. The 2018
Other examples are
Not everyone finds the gentrification concept useful, though.
Climate change is overlaid on top of inequities in how we manage flooding or rebuild after fire, she said. "You can call that climate gentrification, but you could also say it's inequity in how we manage disasters in



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