Alabama study reveals hurricane resilience programs are paying off for homeowners and insurers
A new
The first-of-its-kind analysis, released this week, reviews thousands of insurance claims linked to Hurricane Sally, which struck Alabama’s coast in 2020 with wind speeds up to 105 miles per hour. Homes retrofitted or built to Fortified standards, a voluntary construction code created by the nonprofit
If every impacted house in
The results show "mitigation works and that we can build things that are resilient to climate change,” said Dr.
Across
IBHS created Fortified to strengthen buildings against storm damage based on decades of research at its facility, where it uses a giant wind tunnel to pummel model houses with rain, hail, and wind up to 130 miles per hour.
“We are having record breaking year after record breaking year of disasters and insured losses, and we have been searching for meaningful ways to reduce the severity and the frequency of those losses,” said
The three levels of designations — Fortified Roof, Silver and Gold — employ methods like improving roof fasteners, using impact-rated doors and windows, and more securely anchoring walls to their foundation. The program requires third-party verification of work.
About 80,000 homes across 32 states now have Fortified designations, with over 53,000 in
The state began looking for ways to improve storm outcomes after Hurricane Ivan in 2004 jolted the state’s insurance market. “Ivan was absolutely devastating,” said Alabama Insurance Commissioner
It became the only state to implement mandatory minimum insurance discounts for Fortified homes, currently as much as half off the wind portion of homeowners’ premiums. It also launched the
The state has doled out
“It worked like gangbusters,” he said. “We’ve seen the market substantially stabilized."
Hurricane Sally offered researchers their first chance to assess the program’s benefits in a real storm. “It really was a prototypical storm that anybody who lives on the hurricane coast is liable to see in any given year,” said Malik.
They collected insurance data on more than 40,000 houses in the affected area — a total insured value of
Fortified construction reduced claim frequency by 55% to 74%, depending on the designation level, and loss severity by 14% to 40%. Despite representing almost one-quarter of the policies studied, Fortified homes accounted for only 9% of claims.
They even fared better than houses built to similar codes but without the official designation, likely due to the program’s more stringent verification requirements.
“It really does start to bring home that there is value for everybody involved,” said Malik. “There’s value for the insurers, there’s value for the homeowner.”
Fortified doesn't address all types of hurricane losses. Nearly half the claims in the study were from fallen trees, which require separate mitigation strategies.
The enhanced standards do add cost: between 0.5% to 3% more for new construction, and 6% to 16% for retrofits. But the longterm benefits have spurred even disaster recovery nonprofits like
“Helping disaster-impacted homeowners build back smarter with storm-resilient construction and IBHS Fortified standards helps break the cycle of disaster and loss,” said
The potential insurance discounts also help recovering families by lowering their monthly expenses and boosting confidence that they can keep affording their homes. “For low-income families, this could mean the difference between upward mobility or years of financial instability after a disaster,” said Corley.
The approach has caught the attention of other states seeking resilience solutions. Fowler spoke before a
“Natural disasters like windstorms, earthquakes, or wildfires will come no matter what we do,” he told the committee. “That means you must find ways to build stronger before the event so you will have less damage after the event. It’s actually a pretty simple concept.”
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