Home / Daily Dose / Natural Disasters are Pushing Up Insurance Rates
Print This Post Print This Post

Natural Disasters are Pushing Up Insurance Rates

Natural disasters occurred in every state over the course of 2020 in the tunes of thousands of these events sprinkled across the states. While one would expect California or Florida to lead in the amount of natural disasters that occur every year, though in reality the states with the highest counts were South Dakota, Virginia, and Texas. 

Winter storms in Texas, for example, accounted for 40% of the total losses in the U.S. property insurance market during the first half of 2021. 

Homeowners should not be shocked to find that their property insurance rates are going up this year—one way or another insurers need to be able to cover their risk amid rising numbers (and severity) of natural disasters that are now occurring across the country on a near-daily level. 

A new paper from SitusAMC describes how climate change starts with a warming ocean which in turn creates stronger, more frequent hurricanes, and create drought patterns turning the western portion of the continent into a “tinderbox” ripe for wildfires. 

"The growing number of climate events has left the insurance industry reeling," said Jennifer Rasmussen, PhD, Vice President and Head of Thought Leadership and Publications for SitusAMC Insights, a division of SitusAMC, and co-author of the white paper. "Many insurers and reinsurers have already seen their 2020 financials severely downgraded. As the intensity and scope of future catastrophes grow, insurance rates for property owners will likely rise significantly in the near future." 

“As these events become more intense, and spread to other regions, the property market will face serious cost burdens from the destruction from these storms,” the report said. “In 2020, the states with the most property damage resulting from major storms collectively lost $23 billion in property damage, according to Moody’s Analytics. And neither Florida nor California, nor Iowa—which lost an estimated $7.5 billion from a derecho—were included in that ranking. Louisiana, which bore the brunt of Hurricanes Laura and Delta, took the most property damage, followed by Oregon, Texas, Tennessee and Washington.” 

The migration habits of people are not helping either. Based on current data “more people are moving to fire-prone and flood-prone areas in the West and Southeast. Current migration trends will place an additional 1.2 million homes at risk for flooding over the next 30 years, an increase of 10% from today, according to data from First Street Foundation.” 

Rates in some places may rise faster than homeowners can afford, leading them to obtain a policy from an “insurer of last resort” which may be available to them, but at a cost of greatly-reduced coverage. 

Many insurance companies draw from reinsurance policies to protect themselves from natural catastrophes. However, the reinsurance industry has been experiencing losses for years, and is currently passing along cost increases to insurers, which will ultimately impact property owners, the white paper stated. 

"Most people may not be surprised to hear insurance rates are going up, but few understand how precarious the situation is for the insurance industry," said Rasmussen. "As the number of climate-related disasters increase, many homeowners and residential real estate investors could be in for a rude awakening in the years ahead." 

Click here to view a full copy of the 13-page report. 

About Author: Kyle G. Horst

Kyle G. Horst is a reporter for DS News and MReport. A graduate of the University of Texas at Tyler, he has worked for a number of daily, weekly, and monthly publications in South Dakota and Texas. With more than 10 years of experience in community journalism, he has won a number of state, national, and international awards for his writing and photography including best newspaper design by the Associated Press Managing Editors Group and the international iPhone photographer of the year by the iPhone Photography Awards. He most recently worked as editor of Community Impact Newspaper covering a number of Dallas-Ft. Worth communities on a hyperlocal level. Contact Kyle G. at [email protected].
x

Check Also

Federal Reserve Holds Rates Steady Moving Into the New Year

The Federal Reserve’s Federal Open Market Committee again chose that no action is better than changing rates as the economy begins to stabilize.