Risky business: Climate change turns up the heat on insurers,
policyholders
Send a link to a friend
[November 11, 2021] By
Noor Zainab Hussain and Carolyn Cohn
(Reuters) - Tony and Jhan Dunn never
thought they would leave California, where they grew up, built a life
together and planned to retire.
But after a wildfire swept through their Northern California town of
Paradise three years ago, burning their home to the ground, they could
not get insurance to buy another.
"We basically got priced out of California," Dunn, a retired planning
specialist, told Reuters from the couple's new home in North Carolina.
There are thousands of homeowners and businesses from California to
Australia in a similar position because the insurance industry, known
for its readiness to cover anything from Bruce Springsteen's vocal
chords to alien abductions, has trouble factoring in climate change.
The tried and tested approach, where decades' worth of historical data
serve to estimate future claims, falls short when weather patterns
change and hurricanes, floods, heat waves or snowstorms become more
extreme and unpredictable, industry experts say. And the British hosts
of the U.N. climate conference in Glasgow acknowledged on Wednesday that
current pledges to cut greenhouse gases were not enough to avert climate
catastrophe.
Insurance broker Aon said in a report last week that "highly anomalous"
floods in Germany and China this year caused record insured losses in
those regions.
"Insurers are pulling out because nobody wants to be in the business of
losing money," says Attila Toth, chief executive at specialist risk
analytics firm Zesty.ai. "And if they don't trust their traditional
models, then they are concerned that they will be losing money."
Zesty.ai, whose customers include Farmers Insurance, reinsurer Berkshire
Hathaway and Aon, uses artificial intelligence trained on more than
1,400 wildfire events to produce climate change risk scores for any
individual property.
In the same vein, reinsurance broker Willis Re is using data from AI
firm Cloud to Street to help clients price flood reinsurance.
Insurance statistics show an urgent need for such innovation.
For example, the average number of large U.S. wildfires has risen by 30%
over the past 15 years and by nearly a fifth in just the last five,
according to Lloyd's of London insurer Chaucer.
In all, insured losses for so-called "secondary" perils such as floods
and wildfires - rather than more closely modelled perils such as
hurricanes - nearly doubled over the past decade, data compiled by Swiss
Re shows.
The reinsurer expects no let-up, forecasting a 30-63% rise in insured
losses for all types of natural catastrophes in advanced markets by
2040. China, Britain, France and Germany, could even see those soaring
between 90% and 120%.
Given the momentum, it is no surprise that traditional models cannot
keep up, Bruce Carnegie-Brown, chairman of insurance market Lloyd's of
London told Reuters.
"If you’ve reached an exponential part of the curve where suddenly,
something’s accelerating, it’s almost certain that we are underpricing
the risk that we’re taking."
FEELING THE HEAT
Policyholders are already feeling the heat, with coverage getting
costlier or harder to come by.
Broker Marsh estimates U.S. property insurance rates have risen by 10%
in the third quarter.
In California, non-renewals of homeowners' insurance policies rose 31%
from a year earlier in 2019 to more than 235,000, the state's Insurance
Department's most recent data showed. The data for 2020 could be
similar, according to Carmen Balber, executive director of Consumer
Watchdog LA.
Across the northern border, the Insurance Bureau of Canada warned on its
website homeowners might not be able to buy a new insurance policy if
they have suffered a fire.
[to top of second column] |
A firefighter climbs a ladder by a burning structure while battling
the Camp Fire in Paradise, California, U.S., November 9, 2018.
REUTERS/Stephen Lam/File Photo
Among those pulling back from home insurance in California are some household
names such as Liberty Mutual, Nationwide and State Farm. Liberty Mutual said it
was a "difficult but necessary step to reduce overall exposure to wildfires," a
sentiment echoed by other insurers.
Some insurers aim to reduce their exposure by helping clients become more
resilient. Commercial insurer AXA, for example, offers a consulting service for
clients such as manufacturers, identifying their vulnerabilities and suggesting
remedies, such as erecting flood barriers, its chief risk officer Renaud Guidee
told Reuters.
"This is really an alignment of interest."
U.S. insurer Chubb is also working with clients to help them make their
infrastructure sturdier, said Paul J Krump, Vice Chairman, Chubb Group, Global
Underwriting and Claims.
Reinsurers, with their global scope and long history of underwriting catastrophe
risks, also have a role to play in helping the industry adapt to climate change,
analysts say.
Ernst Rauch, chief climate and geo scientist at Munich Re, said the group had
the expertise and willingness to take on climate risk.
The 141-year-old company set up a team to work on natural catastrophes and
climate change in the 1970s after noticing loss patterns starting to change for
weather related events, Rauch said.
"We observed a continuation of years with losses significantly higher compared
to the last 35 years or so. And that's reflected in our models," he said.
Yet there was a gap between what the reinsurer considered a fair premium and
what insurers were prepared to pay.
"We can only transfer this risk on our balance sheet if we get the premium which
we need to cover these risks, based on our own assessment," Rauch said.
Ratings agency S&P Global warned even reinsurers could be underestimating their
exposure to climate risk by as much as 50%, describing their efforts to account
for climate change as "nascent" in a recent report.
Industry experts also say disasters such as hurricanes in Florida with a long
history of causing severe damage, are more closely modelled than floods or
wildfires, which have only in recent years begun to cause major losses.
That calls for reinsurers and independent risk modelling firms such as RMS and
KCC to try new ways of approaching natural catastrophes.
One such approach is scenario modelling, where insurers are provided with a
number of possible climate impacts on their portfolios over years, to take
account of "the whole range of uncertainty," said Laurent Marescot, senior
director, EMEA and CIS, at RMS, which sells its risk models to insurers.
Another involves machine learning, which can be used to take existing models of
floods in a particular region, for example, and map them to other parts of the
world, Marescot said.
But any developments in making insurance more available and affordable will come
too late for the Dunns.
"It was sad because we both spent our whole lives in California, we both grew up
in San Diego," Tony Dunn said. "I never had any intentions ever of leaving
California."
(Reporting by Noor Zainab Hussain in Bengaluru and Carolyn Cohn in London;
Editing by Tomasz Janowski and Elaine Hardcastle)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |