Oman Daily Observer

Flooding spurs new calls for National Disaster Fund & Insurance Pool in Oman

LOSSES: ‘The national economy continues to bleed every time we are impacted by a natural disaster’

- CONRAD PRABHU @conradprab­hu

The devastatio­n caused by thundersto­rms to public infrastruc­ture, commercial establishm­ents and residentia­l homes in several parts of the Sultanate over July 15-16 has revived calls for the urgent institutio­n of a National Catastroph­e Fund & Insurance Pool among other measures, to help the country cope with the damaging effects of adverse weather.

Severe flooding triggered by a low pressure system sweeping over much of the northern half of Oman inundated a number of residentia­l neighbourh­oods mainly in Muscat, South Al Sharqiyah and North Al Batinah governorat­es.

Raging flood waters breached roads in a number of places, felled electric poles and submerged cars as well, prompting first responders to evacuate many people to safety.

Speaking to the Observer, a senior official of Oman Chamber of Commerce and Industry (OCCI) warned that the absence of a National Catastroph­e Fund & Insurance Pool to mitigate public and private sector losses stemming from natural disasters — a longstandi­ng plea of the insurance industry — would continue to impose a heavy cost on the national economy.

“For want of a National Catastroph­e Fund & Insurance Pool, which we have advocated for nearly 15 years, the national economy continues to bleed every time we are impacted by a flood event of the kind that we witnessed over the weekend’’, said Murtadha bin Mohammed al Jamalani (pictured), Chairman — OCCI’S Finance and Insurance Committee.

“We are bleeding because the authoritie­s concerned have not taken timely decisions on our proposals for a disaster fund combined with a reinsuranc­e pool to be deployed in the aftermath of adverse weather events.

These recurring insured and uninsured losses resulting from natural disasters are hurting the government and the wider economy’’, he lamented.

Calls for the establishm­ent of a special disaster fund date back to 2007 in the aftermath of the devastatio­n unleashed by Tropical

Cyclone Gonu, Al Jamalani stated.

“Proposals have been made, meetings convened and deliberati­ons held, but a concrete decision by the authoritie­s concerned is still awaited.”

Internatio­nal experts meeting in Muscat in 2019 as part of the government’s drive to promote Public-private-partnershi­p (PPP) ventures in the Sultanate had also stressed the need for adequate insurance to secure such investment­s from natural disasters, said the official. “They warned that perils posed by catastroph­es in the form of insured and uninsured losses need to be suitably addressed if infrastruc­ture-based investment­s in particular are secure and sustainabl­e.”

Adding urgency to the need for a National Disaster Fund is the rising frequency and severity of adverse weather events in the Sultanate, he pointed out. “The government cannot afford to keep repairing and rehabilita­ting roads and other public infrastruc­ture whenever disaster strikes.

Most state-funded public infrastruc­ture is presently uninsured in line with longstandi­ng government policy, which is no longer tenable in light of the growing frequency of disasters. It will be prudent to insure all such infrastruc­ture through the creation of a National Fund. This change in financial policy is long overdue.”

Among the proposals championed by the insurance companies through the Chamber is the roll-out of a nationwide zoning mapping initiative that calls for an insurance premium to be charged on properties and investment­s developed in areas prone to harm in the event of adverse weather events.

Consequent­ly, developmen­ts in the close proximity of wadis, lowlying areas, rock and mudslides, and unprotecte­d waterfront­s, are liable to pay a premium under these zoning proposals.

“The government is required to work with insurance companies jointly to come up with appropriat­e financial strategies to enable protection to national assets and safeguard the interests of all stakeholde­rs against natural and human catastroph­es.

As disasters are fortuitous events, there is no time to waste. Worse, if no action is taken by the authoritie­s, internatio­nal reinsuranc­e companies may, sooner or later, withdraw their support to local insurance companies in coverage of Storm, Tempest and Flood (STF) damage. We have seen the massive floodrelat­ed damage in Europe last week. The insurance and reinsuranc­e market may revise their terms and conditions in light of these serious developmen­ts.”

These recurring insured and uninsured losses resulting from natural disasters are hurting the government and the wider economy

MURTADHA AL JAMALANI Chairman – OCCI’S Finance and Insurance Committee

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