Global reinsurance experts urge investment in open-source risk models
2019 AUG 28 (NewsRx) -- By a
The increasing frequency and severity of climate-change-driven disasters threaten lives and livelihoods, food security, water supply, property security, and economic prosperity across the globe.
Adapting to climate change, by increasing our ability to recover from specific disasters, reducing vulnerability around the globe and promoting both financial and physical resilience to its effects, is vital to society - and insurance can be a key tool in this.
Using insurance is a step away from crisis towards risk management, and it strengthens socio-economic resilience under a changing climate.
However, it is only one of the available disaster-risk financing mechanisms and needs to be considered within a broader fiscal framework that also includes international assistance, catastrophe debt drawdowns, and other financial securities, disaster reserves and budgets.
In a background paper submitted to the
Within their first recommendation the authors write that improved risk data and analysis of the impact of climate change - essential to increase understanding about the risk profiles of different countries, regions, assets and populations - should enable modelling of the frequency and severity of climate events and potential financial losses attributed to them.
“The data should then be modelled according to differing projections of the rate of climate adaptation: in other words, by different estimates of how much the vulnerability of the natural and built environment may have been reduced, over various periods of time,” the authors write.
“This will ensure that climate risk data, covering both a near-term and long-term view of climate adaptation, can be linked to insurance and the risk-transfer process.”
The most important part of this first recommendation is that models created with the data remain open and widely available.
“This will ensure that they can be used to support public and private insurance mechanisms, including the piloting of insurance innovations, without the pressure to recoup costs from commercial transactions,” the paper’s lead author, Professor
“We need joined-up policy-making between treasury, environment and disaster-management divisions within government. These divisions must also work collaboratively with development agencies to put climate risk data at the heart of national adaptation strategies,”
To improve global society’s resilience to the effects of climate change related disasters, the paper recommends consistent international standards for climate adaptation regulation be established by the
“Appropriate regulation ensures that climate-related insurance is safe for the consumer, in terms of ensuring both appropriate conduct by insurers, and that they will be able to pay claims and won’t all file for insolvency after a large disaster,” the authors write.
“Consistency across coun¬tries is important as sound climate-risk insurance typically requires an appropriate balance between retaining risks in-country, and transferring to globally diversified interna¬tional markets.”
(Our reports deliver fact-based news of research and discoveries from around the world.)



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