Follow/Subscribe

Gary Null's latest shows and articles:

Categories
Books






Hear Gary Null every day at Noon (ET) on
Progressive Radio Network!

Or listen on the go with the brand new PRN mobile app
Click to download!

 

Like Gary Null on Facebook

Gary Null's Home-Based Business Opportunity


Special Offer: Gary Null's documentary "American Veterans: Discarded and Forgotten" DVD  is now available for $19.95! (regularly $40) Click here to order!
For more info. and to watch the Trailer for "American Veterans: Discarded and Forgotten", Click here!


Gary Null Films

Buy Today!:

CALL 877-627-5065

 

   

Check out our new website "The Vaccine Initiative" at www.vaccineinitiative.org - Educating your choice through Research, Articles, Video and Audio Interviews...  


The latest from
Gary Null -
garynullfilms.com!
Now you can
instantly stream
Gary's films online. Each film costs 4.95, and you can view it straight from your computer!

Check out Big Green TV: Environmental Education for Kids!

« Agence France-Presse: Record High Radiation at Crippled Japan Nuke Plant | Main | Robert Kuttner: The Goons of August »
Wednesday
Aug032011

CNBC: Insurance Industry Grapples With Impact Of Climate Change

http://www.cnbc.com/id/43672850

As a surge in catastrophic weather events leads to billions of dollars in claims, climate change may pose the insurance industry’s biggest problem — and profit potential.

An unusual onslaught of floods in Mississippi, tornadoes in the Midwest, drought and wildfires in Texas and earthquakes abroad has wiped out hope of much profit for many insurance and reinsurance companies this year.

That’s nearly five times the first-half average since 2001, and the oftentimes costly hurricane season is just getting underway.

Although the damage has been worse than expected, the industry has plenty of capital set aside to weather the losses — barring the occurrence of more off-the-charts disasters, which insurers and reinsurers say may or may not be linked to global warming.

“Many companies that write large catastrophe risks, primarily reinsurance companies, are getting paid money in many years when nothing happens,” says Matthew Rohrmann, an insurance industry analyst with Keefe, Bruyette & Woods. “There really haven’t been that many devastating hurricanes over the past few years, for example, and reinsurers and insurers are still getting paid premiums. They may lose a lot of money in one year, but their pricing is based on many years.”

Indeed, a year after hurricanes Katrina and Rita wiped out a whopping 25 years worth of insurance premiums back in 2005, the industry bounced back with record profits.

The big question now is to what degree might this year’s wave of extreme weather — including record-breaking floods, devastating wildfires, tornado outbreaks and scorching heat waves across the country — might increasingly become the norm as the planet warms.

"If you have one bad year in 20, that’s okay, but if you start having 10 bad years in 20, that’s something that a risk scientist should be figuring out how to quantify,” says Andrew Castaldi, head of the catastrophe risk unit for the Swiss Re America Corp. “Last year in Texas it was all floods and this year it’s drought. Is that climate change or just natural variability? We’re investigating whether these phenomena are simply normal variability or normal variability with some climate change influence.”

Climate change has been on the radar screens of the insurance industry since the early 1970s.

More erratic weather — like an unprecedented hurricane that hit Brazil in 2004 — could be on the way as the Earth's temperature rises.

But at this stage, most insurance and reinsurance experts say it’s impossible to measure to what degree a catastrophic event might be caused by climate change. That means global warming isn’t being directly priced into insurance premiums and more capital reserves aren’t being set aside.

“If you apply climate models and let them run into the future as has been done in Germany, the models show strong evidence that losses will go up in that country in the next 30 to 60 years and the only cause is greenhouse gas emissions,” says Peter Hoppe, head of Munich Re’s corporate climate center. “This makes it plausible that the increase in catastrophes we’ve seen in the last decade could be partly attributable to global warming. But it’s hard to have 100% certainty.”

Munich Re has a team of nearly three dozen scientists and meteorologists figuring out how to manage the risk of natural catastrophes, including the possible effects of climate change.

“If we know the risk, then climate change is no problem for our business model,” says Hoppe. “We don’t see it as a danger in the next 30 years, but if we don’t do something to contain greenhouse gas emissions now, this is definitely a challenge for the insurance business model in the second half of this century. In 30 or 40 years, climate change could become critical, and we are convinced that it is cheaper to act now than to pay the rising losses later.”

“But every time there’s a loss, there’s a lesson learned,” says Swiss Re’s Castaldi. “With the earthquakes in Chile and Japan, the impact of business interruptions was greatly underestimated because of advances in technology. No one realized how much of a bottleneck would be created because of damage to high-tech machinery.”

The insurance industry — credited with helping create the original fire departments — isn’t only looking at assessing the risks they face when it comes to climate change.

Among insurers' other efforts are the introduction of new products to encourage a drop in emissions, such as mileage-based car insurance, and a push for better building codes and materials in catastrophe-prone zones.

But critics say the industry could be doing more.