Cape Times

It’s now insurance companies vs Harvey

Claims won’t surpass previous storms damages

- Tom Sims

DAMAGES from Hurricane Harvey’s ravaging of Houston and the Texas Gulf Coast are estimated to be well below those from the major storms that hit New Orleans and New York in recent years, insurance executives have said.

Though insurers should swallow the claims easily, given that there have been relatively few natural disasters so far this year, the storm will weigh on an industry struggling to contain prices while sustained low interest rates suppress returns on its investment holdings.

The early assessment of damage from Harvey, made while rain continued to pelt the fourth-largest city in the US, came as a scientist from the world’s largest reinsurer predicted that climate change is likely to result in more intense storms in the future.

“There are more thundersto­rms in parts of Europe and the US than in past decades,” said Ernst Rauch, head of Munich Re’s Corporate Climate Centre, which monitors climate change risks.

“They are more severe. We will not necessaril­y see an increase in frequency, but we can see an increase in intensity. If we see this, we would have to adjust our risk premium.”

Harvey, which has been downgraded to a tropical storm since making landfall, has struck only days before senior insurance executives meet in Monte Carlo to haggle over reinsuranc­e renewals against the backdrop of insurance sector complaints that premiums are too low.

German-based Munich Re and Hannover Re, two of the world’s largest reinsurers, said current informatio­n suggests that insured losses from Harvey are likely to fall well short of the $75 billion (R978bn) for Katrina in 2005 and $30bn for Sandy in 2012.

Estimates

Air Worldwide, a provider of catastroph­e risk modelling software and consulting services, said early on Monday that insured losses from Harvey’s wind and storm surge were estimated at between $1.2bn and $2.3bn.

That figure does not include flooding. “Harvey will be way, way below Katrina,” Munich Re’s Rauch said.

The relatively low damage estimates will be of little comfort to citizens whose homes are under water or whose safety is still threatened.

Houston is facing worsening flooding in the coming days as the storm dumps more rain on the city, swelling rivers to record levels and forcing federal engineers on Monday to release water from reservoirs in an effort to control the rushing currents. Other major insurers, including Swiss Re, said it is too early to gauge the impact of the storm.

“There are so many areas that have been hit by devastatin­g winds and now the massive flooding, and insurance adjusters are having to wait for first responders to simply check on the safety and welfare of citizens,” said Mark Hanna of the Insurance Council of Texas. – Reuters

 ?? PHOTO: AP ?? Rescue boats fill a flooded street as flood victims are evacuated while floodwater­s from tropical storm Harvey rise in Houston on Monday. Damages from Harvey are estimated by insurance firms to be below those from the major storms that hit New Orleans...
PHOTO: AP Rescue boats fill a flooded street as flood victims are evacuated while floodwater­s from tropical storm Harvey rise in Houston on Monday. Damages from Harvey are estimated by insurance firms to be below those from the major storms that hit New Orleans...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa