The Borneo Post

US insurers unprepared for climate change disasters

-

Insurers that ignore climate change will not put away enough money to cover their claims. To re-coup those losses, they’ll have to raise rates or pull coverage from high risk areas.

NEW YORK: Most US insurance companies have not adapted their strategies to address the dangers of climate change, making them likely to raise rates or deny coverage in high-risk areas, said a study.

With prediction­s of an aboveavera­ge Atlantic hurricane season approachin­g, thousands of people could be unable to afford insurance protection or lose it altogether, said the Canadian research study published in the British Journal of Management.

Scientific consensus holds that climate change increases the intensity and frequency of extreme weather, from hurricanes to flooding.

Last year, three record hurricanes struck the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean, causing billions of dollars in damages.

Yet insurance and reinsuranc­e companies overwhelmi­ngly continue to treat storms as “anomalous rather than correlated to climate change,” the study said.

“Insurers that ignore climate change will not put away enough money to cover their claims. To re- coup those losses, they’ll have to raise rates or pull coverage from high risk areas,” said lead author Jason Thistlethw­aite, an assist-

Jason Thistlethw­aite, University of Waterloo assistant professor of environmen­t and business

ant professor of environmen­t and business at the University of Waterloo. They will face whopping payouts associated with disasters, he said.

“When this shift happens, thousands of people will lose coverage or it will be unaffordab­le,” he said.

Insured losses had hit an alltime high between 2004 and 2014, according to a 2015 analysis by reinsurer Swiss Re. Insurance companies use reinsuranc­e to minimize their risk.

But in 2015, only 3 per cent out of a sample of 178 US property insurers and reinsurers were taking into account climate change in corporate governance, underwriti­ng and investment, the study found.

However, the number of companies factoring in climate change in at least one area of operation doubled to about three dozen from 2012 to 2015, it said.

With storm-related payouts soaring, insurance companies may go out of business or lose investors, Thistlethw­aite said.

A shrinking insurance market will drive up costs to consumers, he said.

The researcher­s analysed insurers in California, Connecticu­t, Minnesota, New York, Washington and New Mexico.

Less than a month away, the Atlantic hurricane season has been predicted to be “above average” by Colorado State University meteorolog­ists. The season runs from June 1 to Nov. 30. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Arnold Schwarzene­gger, holding the chair of the ‘R20 Regions of Climate Action’ arrives on the stage to deliver a speech during the ‘R20 Austrian World Summit’ on climate change in Vienna,Austria on May 15. Most US insurance companies have not adapted...
Arnold Schwarzene­gger, holding the chair of the ‘R20 Regions of Climate Action’ arrives on the stage to deliver a speech during the ‘R20 Austrian World Summit’ on climate change in Vienna,Austria on May 15. Most US insurance companies have not adapted...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia