U.S. storms make 2021 one of most costly years for insurers - Swiss Re
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[December 14, 2021] FRANKFURT
(Reuters) -Hurricane Ida and a winter storm that brought freezing
temperatures to Texas made 2021 one of the costliest years on record for
insurers, Swiss Re said on Tuesday.
It also warned of bigger losses in years to come as populations and
industry face the prospect of increasingly severe weather events
https://www.reuters.com/markets/
commodities/killer-heatwaves-floods-climate-change-worsened-weather-extremes-2021-2021-12-13
amid climate change.
Insured losses from natural catastrophes totalled $105 billion this
year, the fourth-highest since reinsurer Swiss Re began keeping records
in 1970.
"Natural catastrophe losses are likely to continue to grow more than
global GDP given increases in wealth, urbanisation and climate change,"
Swiss Re said in a statement with its annual tally, referring to gross
domestic product.
More than 10,000 people were killed or are still missing as a result of
this year's natural disasters, Swiss Re said.
Hurricane Ida, where damage stretched from New Orleans to New York,
resulted in $30-$32 billion in insured losses. Winter storm Uri, which
primarily hit Texas, resulted in $15 billion in losses.
Floods in Germany and surrounding countries resulted in $13 billion in
insured damages.
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Workers clean up the site of the Historic Karnofsky Shop, a historic
building, that collapsed during Hurricane Ida in New Orleans,
Louisiana, U.S., September 6, 2021. REUTERS/Kathleen Flynn/File
Photo
Many of the events in 2021
https://www.reuters.com/news/
picture/from-killer-heatwaves-to-floods-climate-idUSRTS3M1JF were exacerbated by
climate change, scientists say, adding that there are more – and worse – to come
as the Earth's atmosphere continues to warm through the next decade and beyond.
The costliest year on record was 2017, with hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Maria.
That was followed by 2011, when big earthquakes hit Japan and New Zealand, and
2005, when Hurricane Katrina ravaged New Orleans.
Insurers have in same cases been raising the rates they charge as a result of
the increasingly likelihood of disasters, and in some places they have stopped
providing coverage.
As insurers warn about climate change and the costs associated with it, they
themselves are under pressure from activists
https://www.reuters.com/business/
cop/with-sponges-petitions-climate-activists-take-insurers-2021-11-26 to stop
insuring dirty industries.
(Reporting by Tom Sims and Paul Arnold, Editing by Miranda Murray and Timothy
Heritage)
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