The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Climate change risks raising SA premiums

-

CLIMATE change poses the most significan­t threat for South African insurance companies and risks raising premiums and the cost of reinsuranc­e, a top official at its biggest insurer by assets said.

After staying almost flat in the decade to 2020, the cost for reinsuring against catastroph­ic events for Old Mutual has climbed as much as 30 percent, according to Garth Napier, managing director at a unit.

In addition to Covid-19, reinsuranc­e costs have jumped due to the worst flooding in almost three decades that drowned more than 400 people in landslides and washed away houses in 2022, he said in an interview Friday.

Reinsurers — the businesses that underwrite insurance companies — paid out R30 billion for that catastroph­e. In total, the industry has reimbursed more than R100 billion for the pandemic, floods, and riots in the past three years, Napier said, citing data by from reinsuranc­e broker Gallagher Re.

“The biggest concern for the industry is climate change driving a significan­t increase in the number of events that are happening,” he said. “There’s definitely some data to support that we are seeing an increase in frequency in South Africa and globally, and that the extent of the damage is definitely a lot higher than what it would’ve been in the past.”

Customers could see a 10 percent increase in premiums across the board this year, Napier estimated.

Last year, an investment-management arm of Old Mutual said it would vote against some resolution­s at an annual general meeting of Sasol because of the petrochemi­cals and fuel firm’s poor record on climate targets. The company accounts for about a fifth of South Africa’s greenhouse gas emissions and releases a slew of pollutants. It has set a target of cutting emissions by 30 percent by 2030 and reaching so-called net zero by 2050. — Bloomberg.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe