General Insurance Article - Insurers have coped well with increased extreme weather


 Whether or not a direct result of climate change, the number and frequency of extreme weather events have increased, but insurance and reinsurance companies have coped well so far, says Standard & Poor's.

 "We believe the industry has been, and remains, well prepared to deal with weather events of the magnitude the world has been experiencing in the past two years. For that reason, the ratings impact of these natural catastrophes has been limited," said Standard & Poor's credit analyst Miroslav Petkov, in the report - "Are Insurers Prepared For The Extreme Weather Climate Change May Bring?"

 The rating agency added "Re/insurers generally have been able to manage the impact of the extreme weather events over the past two years because of their risk diversification, as well as their effective underwriting, risk management, and risk mitigation practices. However, while the events were extreme, they were not of historic proportions, and the related losses were well within the re/insurers' risk appetite and excess capital. That said, widespread rating changes are unlikely unless the wider industry racks up weather-related losses that exceed those we expect to occur no more frequently than once in 250 years.

 Our view is that many of the insurers and reinsurers (re/insurers) we rate have processes in place to monitor the potential impact of climate change on extreme weather. We consider that re/insurers have the processes in place to ensure that they can adjust premiums for any gradual increase in weather-related claims in the future. However, even those that have invested the most in understanding the impact of climate change currently don't explicitly allow for it in their pricing and modelling.

 Some scientists believe that climate change may lead to an increase in both the size and frequency of extreme events. However, due to the complexity of climate systems, there is significant uncertainty about the exact impact. Until a consensus emerges, we don't expect the industry to directly allow for the impact of climate change."

 "Our view is that climate change is another factor contributing to the challenges of modelling extreme weather events," Petkov said. "For that reason, we take a favourable view of re/insurers that consider how climate change, despite its uncertainties, may affect extreme events in capital modelling and exposure management. While the understanding of climate change is still developing, we believe a sudden spike in the frequency and severity of weather events could test the industry."  

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

US insurers leading the AI arms race
New research from leading Insurtech provider, hyperexponential (hx), reveals that while insurers are energised by the potential of artificial intellig
Hurricanes and earthquakes could lead to USD300bn losses
Following the long-term annual growth trend of 5–7%, global insured natural catastrophe losses may reach USD 145 billion in 2025, mainly driven by sec
FCA set to launch live AI testing service
The FCA is seeking views from firms about how its live AI testing service can help them to deploy safe and responsible AI, which will benefit UK consu

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.