Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

2011 calamities a record for insurers

Put at $105 billion, natural-disaster losses beat Katrina year

- GEIR MOULSON

BERLIN — Earthquake­s in Japan and New Zealand made 2011 the costliest year yet for the insurance industry in terms of natural-disaster losses, a leading reinsuranc­e company said Wednesday.

Munich Re AG said in an annual report that insured losses last year totaled $105 billion — exceeding the previous record of $101 billion set in 2005, when losses were swollen by claims from Hurricane Katrina.

The company said the total economic cost last year from natural disasters — including uninsured losses — totaled about $380 billion. That was far above the 2005 record of $220 billion.

Japan’s earthquake and tsunami in March caused overall losses of $ 210 billion and insured losses of between $ 35 billion and $40 billion, Munich Re said. That didn’t include the consequenc­es of the subsequent meltdowns at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, which resulted in the evacuation of a wide area.

The second most costly disaster for insurers, at $13 billion, was the February quake that devastated much of the New Zealand city of Christchur­ch. Overall losses were $16 billion.

Munich Re noted that last year’s sequence of natural disasters was very rare.

“We had to contend with events with return periods of once every 1,000 years or even higher at the locations concerned,” Torsten Jeworrek, Munich Re’s board member responsibl­e for global reinsuranc­e, said in the statement. “We are prepared for such extreme situations.”

Building codes in earthquake­prone regions need to be made even stricter, he argued.

Last year’s third- costliest disaster for insurers was Thailand’s worst flooding in half a century, which began in late July and continued for months.

Insured losses were $10 billion, and overall losses were estimated at $40 billion, making it Thailand’s costliest-ever natural disaster, Munich Re said.

Severe storms and tornadoes in the United States in late April cost insurers $7.3 billion and led to overall damage worth $ 15 billion. Hurricane Irene, which hit the Caribbean and U. S. in late August, caused insured losses of $7 billion and total losses of $15 billion.

Still, Munich Re said losses from North Atlantic hurricanes were “moderate” in 2011, with only three major named storms making landfall in the United States.

Reinsurers offer backup policies to companies writing primary insurance policies. Reinsuranc­e helps spread risk so that the system can handle large losses from natural disasters.

Munich Re has measured natural disaster costs since 1980.

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