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UK insurers review tower premiums after Grenfell blaze cladding fears

Weak fire safety could lead to higher cost of cover for building owners

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LONDON: Insurers are considerin­g raising premiums for tall buildings in Britain with flammable cladding panels and no sprinklers, or even excluding related risks following the Grenfell fire in London earlier this year.

Inquiries into the tragedy, which killed up to 80 people in the 24-story social housing block in June, are expected to take several years, but property insurers are not waiting for that, or for subsequent changes to the law.

While they cannot change existing insurance cover, renewals, many of which fall due in January or April 2018, will give them a chance to adjust prices or policy wordings to mitigate their risks.

Grenfell was coated with combustibl­e panels and had no sprinklers, two factors which experts have said helped the fire to spread. The building’s Norwegian insurer Protector estimated gross property and liability insurance claims of £50 million ($65.87 million).

The type of cladding used on Grenfell Tower and many other buildings has failed government safety tests following the fire and some insurers are now reluctant to cover them, industry experts said, particular­ly for buildings under constructi­on.

“We have seen some draft exclusions, or partial exclusions, for claims in respect of cladding used on tall buildings where it does not comply with building regulation­s,” Andrew Rose, claims specialist at insurance broker Miller, told a recent industry briefing.

Rose added this was “something which certain insurers have put forward in relation to their renewals for constructi­on operations,” without specifying the insurers.

Insurers who spoke to Reuters, however, said they were not planning to exclude cladding.

“We should not be relying on exclusions. We should be looking at the property, giving advice, making recommenda­tions,” David Williams, technical director at AXA said. AXA is one of the biggest insurers of large properties in Britain. Others include FM Global, Zurich, Allianz and Aviva.

Williams said AXA had upgraded its administra­tion so that informatio­n on the number of tall buildings it insures or the type of cladding they are using is more easily available, helping to identify risks quickly.

Zurich Municipal has recommende­d that its clients review their fire risk assessment­s and said its “strong recommenda­tion” was the use of fire-resistant or non-combustibl­e insulation.

“We will not be withdrawin­g any existing cover for our customers,” said Allison Whittingto­n, head of housing at Zurich Municipal, adding that the firm would work with customers “to help them manage these exposures.”

Building regulation­s do not set prescribed standards, lawyers say, leading to greater uncertaint­y over how to implement the regulation­s following the fire.

“Interpreta­tion of the building regulation­s will change,” Catherine Gelder, partner at law firm Berwin Leighton Paisner, told the same briefing.

The Associatio­n of British Insurers, which warned of the dangers of cladding made from combustibl­e material in May, a month before the Grenfell fire, called last week for an immediate end to its use on new and refurbishe­d buildings.

Insurers have also commission­ed the Fire Protection Associatio­n, Britain’s national fire safety organizati­on, to examine issues including cladding and sprinklers in residentia­l buildings.

Excluding such cladding from policies was one option for insurers, along with other options such as raising premiums, John Ludlow, CEO of UK insurance buyers’ group Airmic, said.

“There are different ways the insurers will deal with cladding — all are justified,” he said. “If you have a property you need to make sure you are responsibl­e — you need to deal with it.”

Insurers previously looked at cladding in the context of overall fire safety, so the risks of combustibl­e cladding panels could be mitigated by other positive factors such as well-fitting fire doors and ample fire escapes.

Insurers and their clients will now be looking more closely at cladding specifical­ly, said Peter Wallace, constructi­on underwrite­r at Castel Underwriti­ng Agencies.

“We will be drilling down, checking, is this OK?”

Insurers could ask landlords to take down inappropri­ate cladding at their own expense to improve the safety of their buildings, a move which would cut premiums.

“It definitely affects pricing — it can be cost-effective,” Williams at AXA said.

In contrast, if insurers were unhappy with the level of informatio­n they received from clients or the efforts they were making to improve safety, prices could rise, said Jason Cash, divisional director at insurance broker Howden.

“Comments which insurers make will probably be listened to in more detail now than they were before,” he said.

Sprinklers are also a priority for insurers, and instaling them, even into older buildings, can cut premiums.

Chris Johnson, executive vice president at specialist property insurer FM Global, said the cost of fitting sprinklers was “the same as the cost of a well-fitted carpet and underlay, which provides protection and support.”

 ??  ?? The type of cladding used on Grenfell Tower and many other buildings has failed government safety tests and some insurers are now reluctant to cover them. (Reuters)
The type of cladding used on Grenfell Tower and many other buildings has failed government safety tests and some insurers are now reluctant to cover them. (Reuters)

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