U.S. rolls out first update to flood insurance pricing in 50 years
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[April 02, 2021] By
Alwyn Scott
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Hundreds of thousands
of Americans will pay significantly more to insure their homes in
coastal areas and flood zones under new rules released on Thursday by
the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), the first major update
to its pricing system in half a century.
The agency said that, over the coming year, it will phase in a
price-setting method that marks an epochal shift in the National Flood
Insurance Program (NFIP), which was set up in 1968 to cover property in
flood-prone areas.
New premiums will be based on a property's value, risk of flooding and
other factors, rather than simply on a property's elevation in a flood
zone. They will take effect on Oct. 1, 2021, for new policies and April
1, 2022, for the rest, FEMA said.
The NFIP currently provides $1.3 trillion in coverage through more than
5 million policies in the U.S., but has been losing money for years and
is currently $20.5 billion in debt.
The new rules will mean hefty increases for expensive properties in
wealthy coastal enclaves, said Jeremy Porter, head of research and
development at First Street Foundation, a Brooklyn-New York based
nonprofit that studies flood risk.
Current flood zone-based pricing was "basically a subsidy to people,"
Porter said. Under FEMA's new system, "pricing is based on your
insurance risk."
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Housing surrounded by flood waters caused by Hurricane Harvey is
seen from a U.S. Coast Guard helicopter during an overflight from
Port Aransas to Port O'Connor, Texas, August 26, 2017. U.S. Coast
Guard/Petty Officer 3rd Class Johanna Strickland/Handout via REUTERS
FEMA said it expects 4%, or more than 200,000 policies, will see significant
premium increases, while about 1.15 million will see decreases, noting the
change makes prices "more equitable."
In a study released in February of flood-prone properties rather than policies,
First Street determined that more than 4 million would face increases and the
average premium in flood zones would be $7,895 a year.
The numbers in First Street's study are higher than FEMA's because only about
30% of flood-prone properties carry NFIP coverage, Porter noted.
The changes mark the first update to FEMA's pricing methods in 50 years, and are
based on updated technology and FEMA's evolving knowledge of flood risk, the
agency said.
(Reporting by Alwyn Scott; Editing by Aurora Ellis)
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