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Western U.S. wildfires cost insurers up to $13 billion in 2020

by Matthew Lavietes | @mattlavietes | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Tuesday, 15 December 2020 19:16 GMT

The rubble of a house is seen in the aftermath of the Shady Fire after it advanced into the Skyhawk neighborhood of Santa Rosa, California, U.S. September 28, 2020. REUTERS/Adrees Latif

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As climate change brings hotter and drier conditions, losses from wildfires are surging, risk management experts say

By Matthew Lavietes

NEW YORK, Dec 15 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - A record-breaking wildfire season in the western United States cost insurers a staggering $7 billion to $13 billion in 2020, researchers said on Tuesday, an illustration of the growing price tag on natural disasters linked to climate change.

Risk Management Solutions (RMS), a U.S.-based risk management company, tabulated the costs of insured losses from fires through November in California, Oregon, Washington and Colorado.

The unprecedented figure should push insurance companies to look again at their risks and potentially create political pressure to more effectively curb wildfire and climate change risks, fire experts said.

"Ten years ago, this was a non-issue for (insurance firms). Now they're saying 'This is an extraordinary increase in our risk portfolio,'" said David Peterson, a forest biology professor and wildfire expert at the University of Washington.

Companies were likely to change "how they start managing these things in the future. Otherwise they won't survive," he told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The RMS estimates included losses from property damage, including smoke damage, as well as business interruption, evacuations and additional living expenses incurred by families hit by fires.

The damage was most severe in northern California, which saw $5 billion to $9 billion in insured losses, RMS projected.

Overall, wildfires killed several dozen people and scorched millions of acres in California and the Pacific Northwest this year, the worst fire season in regional history.

The months of August, September and October ranked as California's hottest since records began in 1895, according to the U.S. National Weather Service.

Hotter and dryer conditions can make forests and brush more flammable, creating more intense and damaging fires.

RMS noted that several measures were effective in helping curb losses, including power shutoffs by utilities companies and state legislation to reimburse and protect those displaced by fires, as well as firefighter preparedness despite the COVID-19 pandemic.

But company officials cautioned that the striking amount of insured losses should serve as a warning for the future.

"This wildfire season reaffirms the growing catastrophic nature of this peril," said Michael Young, RMS's vice president of product management, in a statement.

"Wildfire risk is clearly evolving, not only in California, but also in other states, as we observed in Oregon and Colorado."

Read more:

Burned by wildfire losses, insurance industry rethinks risk

Scientists paint Australia fires as red alert on climate change

Wildfire-hit countries in need of new strategies to tame burning risks

(Reporting by Matthew Lavietes; editing by Laurie Goering; Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers the lives of people around the world who struggle to live freely or fairly. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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