Insurers warn climate change could double premiums

New report expected to show insurance industry has underestimated financial cost of climate change damage

By BusinessGreen.com Staff

23 Mar 2009

Be the first to comment

Floods

Insurance companies are reportedly poised to increase their estimates for future premiums as scientific predictions about the impacts of climate change continue to worsen.

According to Sunday Times reports yesterday, a new report by the Association of British Insurers will show that previous estimates of climate change-related damage are too low and need to be updated in line with recent scientific predictions that temperatures could rise by between four and six degrees by the end of the century.

"We are concerned that our estimates in our [last] report [in 2005] were too conservative," Swenja Surminski of the ABI told the paper. "Climate change is likely to have a more severe impact on the future price, affordability and availability of insurance coverage."

Premiums for businesses and householders in those areas that see increased risks of flooding as a result of climate change could more than double, according to Andrew Dlugo-lecki, a visiting research fellow at the University of East Anglia's Climatic Research Unit.

Premiums for natural disaster cover have already risen following one of the costliest catastrophe years for the insurance industry in history, which resulted in disaster-related economic losses of $269bn, and experts are predicting that the expected increase in the incidence of such events will lead to higher premiums.

In related news, a separate forthcoming report from the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis will reportedly show that the €1bn EU Solidarity Fund, which is supposed to cover "uninsurable risk" for government-owned infrastructure, such as roads and bridges, will need to be increased if, as expected, the risk of climate change-related infrastructure damage rises.

WHAT DO YOU THINK? Add your comment

  

Greg Barker has said that despite cuts to solar incentives the industry will continue to grow this year - is he right?

2%

6%

7%

85%

INSIGHT

Submit your email address and we'll send a link to a personal newsletter control panel


Mechanical Integrity Engineer

09 Feb 2012

Mechanical Integrity Engineer, 35,000-45,000, Midlands A global power organization are looking to identify a Mechanical Integrity Engineer to become part of a globally accalimed engineer department. Delivering R&D Projects in relation to the business' GAS and Steam Turbine operations - the role will challenge the engineers mechanical design capabilities and integrity of company products. The succe

APC

Guidelines for specification of data centre power density

The science and practical application of an improved method for the specification of power and cooling infrastructure for data centres

Quocirca

Powering the data centre

A look at alternative approaches to managing energy for cost and/or sustainability reasons in data centres