Insurance claims to rise because of climate change - Money - Business - Evening Standard
       

Insurance claims to rise because of climate change

Climate change is set to make insurance more expensive and harder to obtain, the Association of British Insurers (ABI) warned today.

The group said predicted rises in temperatures in the UK looked set to "significantly" increase the cost to insurers of flood and windstorm damage.

It warned that this would feed through into higher premiums for consumers, while it would also mean insurers had to hold more capital in reserve for potential losses, which could lead to a reduction in the availability of cover.

The ABI worked with the Met Office and risk modelling group AIR Worldwide to look at the financial implications for insurers of predicted temperature increases of 2C, 4C and 6C.

It found that the average cost of losses to insurers from river flooding and flash floods could rise by 14% to £633 a year if global temperatures rose by 4C, which could happen by as early as by 2060.

Annual losses as a result of windstorms could increase by 25% to £827 million due to predicted changes to storm tracks, along which cyclones travel.

The cost to insurers from extreme floods, which occur once every 100 years on average in Great Britain, could soar by 30% to £5.4 billion, while the cost of extreme windstorms could rise by 14% to £7.3 billion, based on a 4C rise.

The impact on insurers is even greater if the temperature rises by 6C, with a rise of this level increasing losses from extreme floods and windstorms by 56%.

The group said Wales and the South West would be the worst affected regions of the UK, with average annual flood and wind damage losses for insurers jumping by 29% and 24% respectively if global temperatures rose by 4C.
Nick Starling, the ABI's director of general insurance and health, said: "These findings have serious implications for insurers, householders, businesses and governments.

"The continued widespread availability of property insurance in the future depends on taking action now to manage the threats of climate change.

"A two-degree temperature rise may be inevitable, but we can limit further increases. The clear message to world leaders meeting at the UN's Copenhagen Climate Change Summit in December is that they must reach agreement on ambitious emission reduction targets."

He also called on the Government to push ahead with the Flood and Water Management Bill, so that the long-term flood risk could be better managed.

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