Current:Home > MarketsInsurance firms need more climate change information. Scientists say they can help -CapitalWay
Insurance firms need more climate change information. Scientists say they can help
View
Date:2025-04-18 16:38:18
Climate-driven floods, hurricanes, wildfires and heat waves cause billions of dollars of damage every year in the United States. Federal scientists hope that better access to climate data will help one industry adapt: property insurers.
Insurance companies are on the hook to pay for repairs after disasters, and even to rebuild entire homes and businesses that are destroyed. The growing cost to insurers was on full display last year, when Hurricane Ian caused more than $100 billion of damage in Florida, at least half of which was insured.
As climate-driven extreme weather gets more common, insurance companies nationwide raise prices, or cancel policies altogether, leaving homeowners in the lurch. Florida, North Carolina, Louisiana, Colorado, Oregon and California have all seen insurers fold, cancel policies or leave the state after repeated floods, hurricanes and wildfires.
"More and more Americans are frankly having mother nature barge through their front door," says Roy Wright, who leads the Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety, an insurance industry-backed research group. "That change in climate comes at a price."
Now, two federal science agencies are trying to help. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and the National Science Foundation (NSF) say they will create a research center that focuses on bringing climate change data to the insurance industry.
Climate science can help companies see the future
The goal is to help insurers understand how often and how severe floods, fires, heat waves and other climate-driven disasters will be in the future, so that companies can adjust their businesses to cope with that risk.
It's not that insurance companies aren't already considering climate change. "Insurers are incredibly sophisticated around trying to understand physical climate risk," says Sarah Kapnick, NOAA's chief scientist.
But, Kapnick says, the methods that insurers currently use to figure out how much to charge for a property insurance policy don't typically include detailed, long-term projections about how the climate will change in the future. Instead, companies rely on information about what has happened in the past: how frequently hurricanes have caused flooding, for example, or how hot the weather gets in August.
The problem is that the future, and even the present, no longer look like the past. Large hurricanes that used to be infrequent are getting more common. The hottest days are often beyond what anyone has ever experienced.
"What we knew about rain and wind and wildfire in 1990, and what we knew in 2010, is useful information, but it's insufficient to understand the risks that befall us come 2025, come 2030," Wright says. "NOAA, and the data they provide, is some of the most powerful data available anywhere in the world."
Insurance companies are worried about climate change
Kapnick says she has heard from insurance companies that are increasingly concerned that they don't have sufficient information to accurately assess what the future holds.
"In the last few months they've really come to us saying, 'We need better information on understanding climate change and its effects on extreme [weather],'" Kapnick explains.
The industry group the American Property Casualty Insurance Association says the new research center will be "extremely beneficial" to property insurers.
"Climate change is a significant concern to the property casualty insurance industry as our nation faces the prospect of increased frequency and severity of major natural disasters including hurricanes, wildfires, and floods," Karen Collins, a vice president at the trade group, wrote in an email to NPR. "Insurers strongly support increased investments that help advance the latest science."
The goal of the new research center will be to make detailed federal climate data available to insurance companies so they can use climate science to look into the future.
In the coming months, the National Science Foundation will choose one or more universities to lead the center. Academic researchers, graduate students and federal scientists will work with insurers and reinsurers to make scientific information about climate change accessible to insurance companies, NOAA says.
This type of collaboration between universities, government scientists and companies is not limited to climate science. The NSF oversees more than 70 such centers, including in agriculture, materials science and transportation.
veryGood! (432)
Related
- Retirement planning: 3 crucial moves everyone should make before 2025
- Elaborate scheme used drones to drop drugs in prisons, authorities in Georgia say
- Plan to watch the April 2024 total solar eclipse? Scientists need your help.
- Kraft Heinz Faces Shareholder Vote On Its ‘Deceptive’ Recycling Labels
- In ‘Nickel Boys,’ striving for a new way to see
- Afternoon shooting in Nashville restaurant kills 1 man and injures 5 others
- Kraft Heinz Faces Shareholder Vote On Its ‘Deceptive’ Recycling Labels
- Are banks, post offices, UPS and FedEx open on Easter 2024? Here's what to know
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- How to clean the inside of your refrigerator and get rid of those pesky odors
Ranking
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Small plane crash kills 2 people in California near Nevada line, police say
- Are banks, post offices, UPS and FedEx open on Easter 2024? Here's what to know
- UCLA coach regrets social media share; Iowa guard Sydney Affolter exhibits perfect timing
- 2025 'Doomsday Clock': This is how close we are to self
- Go inside Hub City Bookshop in South Carolina and meet mascot cat Zora
- 13-year-old girl detained after shooting sends Minnesota boy to the hospital
- 2024 men's NCAA Tournament Final Four dates, game times, TV, location, teams and more
Recommendation
Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
The 10 best 'Jolene' covers from Beyoncé's new song to the White Stripes and Miley Cyrus
Biden says he'll visit Baltimore next week as response to bridge collapse continues
Veteran CB Cameron Sutton turns himself in weeks after domestic violence allegation
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
The Best Tools for Every Type of Makeup Girlie: Floor, Vanity, Bathroom & More
The history of No. 11 seeds in the Final Four after NC State's continues March Madness run
The pool was safety to transgender swimmer Schuyler Bailar. He wants it that way for others