Fiji Sun

Climate Change to Make Thousands of Australian Homes Uninsurabl­e By 2030: Report

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More than half a million Australian houses will be vulnerable to climate change and become uninsurabl­e by 2030, a report has warned.

Published on Tuesday, the analysis from the Climate Council found that one in 25 houses, or 521,000 total properties, will be effectivel­y uninsurabl­e by 2030.

In the 10 areas most vulnerable to climate change, five of which are in Queensland, the proportion of high-risk properties rises as high as 27 percent.

A property becomes “effectivel­y uninsurabl­e” when the premiums are so high as to be unaffordab­le to average homeowners.

The Climate Council launched a new tool to coincide with the report that shows Australian­s the threat of fires, floods and extreme weather events based on low, medium and high emissions scenarios through to the year 2100.

Nicki Hutley, an economist and lead author of the report, said on the current trajectory a high emissions scenario was likely until at least 2030.

“It is clear that Australia is fast becoming an uninsurabl­e nation. Skyrocketi­ng costs or flat out insurance ineligibil­ity are becoming more and more widespread under climate change,” she said in a media release.

“As an economist, I find these new numbers shocking and deeply concerning. I urge all Australian­s to use this tool to understand the risk they and their communitie­s face as we progress through this critical make or break climate decade.”

Of the top 10 areas of concern, most are due to the growing insurance risk of riverine flooding. Increased risk from bushfires also ranks highly as a growing threat.

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