Senate Budget Committee Chair Whitehouse Launches Investigation Into Citizens Property Insurance Amid Questions About Company Long-Term Solvency
Senator
This probe builds on two previous, and ongoing, investigations into the insurance industry's response to climate change amid the Committee's growing concerns about the economy-wide harms from widespread uninsurability. The Committee is currently seeking documents and information related to the insurance industry's continued investment in and underwriting of fossil fuel expansion projects, as well as companies' plans to address increased underwriting losses from climate disasters.
As of 2022, Citizens' market share for homeowners multi-peril policies was approaching 20 percent and had more than doubled since 2020. As private insurers in
"The Committee is ... increasingly concerned about
In March, Governor
"In light of the state's acknowledgement of Citizens' potential insolvency and the likelihood that it would be both politically and economically unfeasible for Citizens to attempt to recoup tens of billions of dollars in losses from policyholders across
Among other requests, the Committee is seeking information related to the following:
* What are Citizens' current assets? What is Citizens' total reinsurance coverage? What are the maximum total claims Citizens would be able to pay out without having to levy an assessment on
* What communications has Citizens had with
* Has Citizens contemplated asking for a federal bailout if it were unable to cover its losses?
The Budget Committee has held a series of hearings examining the costs and economic risks associated with increasing losses to properties that face the greatest threats from climate change and in mortgage and insurance markets. Insurance industry executives, economists, actuaries, and other experts have testified that climate change could trigger cascading failures that undermine financial and economic stability. Their testimony has made clear that:
* Climate-related losses have already grown substantially and are projected to continue to rise;
* As climate-related risks increase, insurance premiums will increase and/or insurers will pull out of at-risk markets;
* As insurance becomes increasingly expensive and/or unavailable, property values in affected markets will decline;
* Insurance unavailability will cause affected properties to become unmortgageable; and
* A widescale decline in coastal and wildland-urban interface community property values would present a systemic risk to the
The Committee has requested documents and information by
The full letter is available here (https://www.budget.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/letter_to_citizens.pdf).
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Original text here: https://www.budget.senate.gov/chairman/newsroom/press/whitehouse-launches-investigation-into-citizens-property-insurance-amid-questions-about-companys-long-term-solvency
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