CANCUN CLIMATE
CONFERENCE 2010
Insurance
companies have no doubts about global warming
http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2010/11/30/pm-insurance-companies-have-no-doubts-about-global-warming/
Insurance companies are
taking into account the potential for rising water levels and more
aggressive hurricanes when considering rates. Marketplace's Scott Tong
reports.
EXT OF STORY
KAI RYSSDAL: The weather
forecast for Cancun, Mexico, today was mostly sunny, 81 degrees. So if
United Nations climate negotiators don't make any progress, at least
there's always the beach. It's early yet in the U.N.'s two-week global
warming conference; we're on day two of the meeting. But not much is
really expected to happen by the end of the thing, anyway. It's a
complicated business, this whole idea of coping with a changing
climate. Because basically, you're changing everything -- from
re-figuring the fundamentals of our energy supply to helping poor
countries figure out how to adapt to a warmer world. Policymakers, so
far, have mostly decided they can't decide what to do. So businesses
have been stepping in.
Not only does Marketplace's Scott Tong get to spend two weeks in
Cancun, reporting on the conference itself, but before he left, he
took a little side trip to the island of Grand Bahama for this story
about insurance and an unstable climate.
Sound of water
lapping
SCOTT
TONG: I know what you're
thinking. But this story comes to you from the other side of Grand
Bahama. The rocky north shore, four miles from the nearest rum
cocktail. I checked.
The Queen's Cove area of canals and mangrove trees has taken a royal
beating from Mother Nature. Ask resident Katherine Bellott. Her
two-story house features a sign out front that reads "Hurricane
Hole."
KATHERINE
BELLOTT: It was pretty
amazing...
Bellott recalls Hurricane Frances from 2004. How the storm surge put
her house under five feet of water, how her husband tried to protect
their family boat.
BELLOTT: He decided when he saw the hurricane
coming to sink it, so it wouldn't fly all over the place. When the
hurricane was finished and we came home, the boat was in the
neighbor's yard.
As for the neighbor's house...
BELLOTT: The only thing we saw there was the
tile floor and maybe a toilet. The actual house was gone.
Hurricane Jeanne followed Frances two weeks later. And together, they
huffed and puffed and blew away the insurance companies. Every insurer
pulled out of Queen's Cove, so now no one here has coverage for wind
damage or floods.
Simon Young at insurance consultancy Caribbean Risk Managers says the
area's too exposed, too low-lying.
SIMON YOUNG: Storm surge
at the coast is the big issue. The general feeling is that it's going
to get worse as the oceans warm up. The potential for bigger, more
aggressive hurricanes increases, as well as sea level rise. And those
two factors together increase the storm surge hazard.
Young says that risk is also rising on the east coast of the U.S. More
broadly, he says for the insurance sector, the basic debate over
climate change ended years ago.
YOUNG: Industry has accepted absolutely that
climate change is real. There is no debate either at the management
level or at the technical level as to whether climate change is going
to have an impact on their industry.
The consulting firm Ernst & Young considers climate change the
greatest strategic risk to property casualty insurance firms.
Now, these companies don't like to skip out on any neighborhood. So
when they do, economists call it a "market signal." And the
message, loosely translated, is, "What are you people smoking?
Live here at your own risk." And the housing market's heard it.
If you want to buy in Queen's Cove, you can't get insurance, so the
bank won't give you a mortgage.
Again, resident Katherine Bellott.
BELLOTT: So a lot of
people have just walked away from their homes. They're just left
there. And then you have some people who sold for next to
nothing.
Those who stayed are
changing the way they live, since they're now on the hook for
everything. Most new houses are built on stilts, literally higher
ground. The walls are made of cement, roofs steel. And this is how
adaptation to an uncertain climate happens here -- not because
politicians or scientists saying so, but because people can't afford
not to.
UCLA economist Matthew Kahn is the author of
"Climatopolis."
MATTHEW
KAHN: The first idea in
economics is people pursue their own self-interest. And by pursuing
their own ruthless self-interest -- moving to higher ground,
rebuilding their homes to protect them in floodplains -- all of these
strategies will reduce the suffering.
Investors are starting to hedge against Mother Nature, too.
Shareholders and federal regulators are demanding companies disclose
how future regulation of greenhouse gas emissions would hurt their
bottom line.
MICHAEL
GREENSTONE: They think
it's inevitable that there will be regulation of carbon.
Economics professor Michael Greenstone at MIT says the investors are
ahead of the policymakers.
GREENSTONE: Financial markets have an excellent way of
aggregating information and reading the future in a much more reliable
way than I think political pundits often do. And the reason is that
money's on the line.
But here's the thing, these market signals can only be felt in free
markets. As opposed to say...
Sounds from a night club -- music, shouting
Florida. At South Beach in Miami, insurance firms are screaming that
they need to raise premiums, based on coastal risk. The state
acknowledges rates are in some areas severely underpriced. But the
regulators won't hike them.
Local insurance broker Alex Soto.
ALEX SOTO: We're not being allowed to charge an
actuarially sound rate. So suppressing that artificially for political
reasons in effect keeps the private insurance companies away.
Price controls have led national insurance firms to exit risky
Florida. So the state of Florida has stepped in, providing cut-rate
insurance as a kind of safety net.
But Simon Young at Caribbean Risk Managers says that distorts the
market signal. So people don't adapt to what the industry considers
climate risk. They keep living and keep building in harm's
way.
YOUNG: The regulatory environment in the U.S.
is protecting the consumer, they think, from paying too much. But
actually it's from paying a fair price for the risk that they're
taking. And unfortunately, that's led to overdevelopment or,
potentially in the long-term, unsustainable development.
The failed market means the insurance industry can't do what it
considers its job: To give early warning signals of risk, change, and
potentially, disaster.
I'm Scott Tong, for Marketplace.