Recently, a devastating hurricane hit across western Cuba and the southeast United States. Hurricane Ian was a large, deadly, destructive Category 4 Atlantic hurricane that took away about 110 lives, approximately 10,000 unconfirmed deaths, and left many homeless.

Research shows that the maximum winds were around 150mph as it hit the southwest coast at the Island of Cayo Costa near Fort Myers and Cape Coral.

A study shows that the amount of rain dumped by the storm was 10% higher because of the climate crisis. A climate researcher at the Lawrence Berkely National Laboratory, Micahel Wehner, said:

These are conservative estimates on the human-induced increases in the rain using our peer-reviewed method. The climate change didn’t cause the storm, but it did cause it to be wetter.

By September 28, more than two million citizens were left in the dark – without power.

Eventually, the storm showed clam tides that dropped to Category 1 hurricane, moving at around 9mph.

Some officials that experienced it said that the damage was feared to be extensive, and it was unknown how bad the situation was as high winds were continuing.

Even though Hurricane Ian has already claimed more lives than any other hurricane in recent memory, its death toll is still far less than those of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, which claimed more than 1,800 lives, and Hurricane Maria in 2017, which claimed nearly 3,000 lives.

Florida governor Ron DeSantis labeled the country as “ground zero” for the hurricane.

Therefore, Real Research, an online survey app, launched a survey seeking opinions on hurricane Ian which caused heavy casualties and damages.

Hurry and answer the survey on hurricane Ian caused heavy casualties on the Real Research app from October 05, 2022. Afterward, you will receive 30 TNCs as a reward.

Survey Details

Survey Title:
Survey on Hurricane Ian Caused Heavy Casualties

Target Number of Participants:
30,000 Users

Demographics

Nationality: All
Age: 21-99
Gender: All
Resident Country: All
Marital Status: All
Language: All
KYC Level: All

Note: This survey is closed. You can view the results here – Japan and the USA Most Prone to Hurricanes, 27.12% Say.