State's insurers face new calls for data, action on climate change
If your utility bill after the latest heat wave or the wildfire smoke stinging your eyes didn't convince you of the effects of climate change, perhaps this will: Climate-related catastrophes cost the global insurance industry
Warmth-intensified hurricanes, floods and heat waves pushed the industry's climate-related losses above
That, in turn, pushes up insurance rates for homeowners and increasingly putting insurance out of reach for those in the climate "danger zones" -- including the 61 percent of
Major insurers have stopped selling new homeowner's policies in
The insurance companies that still call
But the insurance industry's role in the response to climate change came under new scrutiny last week with the release of a report calling for more data from insurers and tighter state regulation of the industry.
The Federal Insurance Office, a unit of the
States need to bring climate risk into their regulation of insurers, ask for more data from the companies and develop their own tools to analyze climate-related hazards, the report found.
Modeling that action, FIO last year proposed a new data effort that would ask insurers for detailed risk-analysis information on homeowners at the ZIP code level.
Response from insurers to the new report was muted. Industry group the
"Climate risk is exacerbated by many aspects that go beyond the ability of insurers to control and so insurers alone cannot resolve climate-related risk issues," said
"Our work in the area of climate risk and resiliency has focused on identifying risk, exploring solutions that reduce risk, improving financial oversight of the industry, and educating consumers," Commissioner
Homeowners need to study their insurance policies carefully and look for gaps in coverage in the event of increasingly likely disasters like floods, earthquakes, wildfires and wind storms, the state suggests.
Oversight or overreach
Calls for more data and "financial oversight" from the states and other public entities have generated pushback from some insurers, who balk at the amount of information required by an ever-growing list of players.
In addition to FIO, the
Speaking at a conference on climate change hosted by the
"There's massive data challenges associated with that," Shields said. "Mom-and-pop shops aren't necessarily reporting that information."
Shields raised what he called "the attribution problem, whether a particular loss or potential loss is attributable to climate change or is it attributable to just normal weather patterns or overpopulation in a wildfire-prone area or poor land-use planning?"
"We run the risk that we're going to generate this very large churn of data that is, in a sense, maladaptive, that causes us to make decisions that in some senses can make the risk worse," Hereid said at the conference.
Shields of The
"A cold-turkey approach doesn't work," Shields said, explaining the insurance industry's perspective on the divestiture movement. "Abandoning those sectors, in our view, is not going to help our society get to net-zero and it's not going to help The
"Insurers have been having it both ways -- underwriting and investing in the fossil fuels climate disaster, while trying to limit coverage for policyholders who are suffering from the climate disaster," the group said in a statement. "Action is needed now -- we are seeing the impact of climate change more starkly every day. It's time to hold insurance companies accountable."
Insurance industry at risk
Industry experts warn that climate change threatens the survival of the property insurance sector itself -- a business that got an early start in the
Major losses incurred by global insurers in the wake of a series of catastrophic weather events last year undermine the sector's stability and puts the world economy as a whole in danger,
"Climate risk is a global, systemic risk and the insurance industry is a bridge between public risks and private capital," Anderson told the senators. "Just as the
Concluding the
"If there is one takeaway from this, it is a need for action, not just words," Mais said. "Recognizing the dangers we face is just the beginning, now we need to act."
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