XPost: alt.home.repair, alt.business.insurance, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics
https://www.newyorker.com/news/the-lede/the-insurance-crisis-that-will- follow-the-california-fires
Last week, on the day before New Year’s Eve, California’s insurance commissioner, Ricardo Lara, announced what his office called “a landmark regulation” to improve access to coverage. The new rule, the commissioner declared, would address the problems that California homeowners were
facing in the present and, at the same time, build “a resilient insurance market for the future.” Then the Palisades Fire ignited, soon to be
followed by the Eaton Fire, the Hurst Fire, the Lidia Fire, and the Sunset Fire. With damages from these still mostly uncontrolled blazes now
estimated at up to a hundred and fifty billion dollars, the future of California’s insurance market is looking a lot more rocky than resilient.
As one L.A.-based insurance agent put it to the Wall Street Journal, “We
are in uncharted territory.”
What is often referred to as California’s “insurance crisis” has been
years in the making. The devastating Camp Fire, near Chico in 2018, caused
an estimated sixteen and a half billion dollars’ worth of damage and led
to a net loss for companies that had written fire policies in the state
that year. In 2019, the number of homeowners’ policies in California that
were not renewed jumped by more than thirty per cent. In 2023, two giant insurers, State Farm and Allstate, announced that they would stop writing
new policies for various forms of property insurance in California. State
Farm said the move came in response to inflation and “rapidly growing catastrophe exposure.” Last summer, it cancelled coverage for more than
fifteen hundred homes in Pacific Palisades, the wealthy enclave where the
first of the L.A. blazes began.
There are several reasons that “catastrophe exposure” in California has in recent years been growing. One is that more people are moving into wildfire-prone areas. Another is that fires are becoming more destructive,
in large measure owing to climate change. A 2023 study concluded that the
area consumed by summer wildfires in central and northern California has increased by five hundred per cent during the past several decades and
that “nearly all of the observed increase” is due to warming. Another
study, put out last year by the group Climate Central, found that rising temperatures had increased the number of “fire weather days”—windy, hot,
and dry—throughout California. This was particularly the case in the
desert basin east of L.A., which now has an average of sixty-one more such
days per year than it did five decades ago. “As our climate warms, the
chances of intense, fast-growing fires like the ones Californians are
facing today will keep rising,” Kaitlyn Trudeau, a senior research
associate at Climate Central, said on Wednesday.
Making a bad situation worse, at least from the insurance companies’ perspective, California’s insurance department made it hard for them to
recoup or even project the growing costs of weather-related disasters.
Until department rules were revised last year, they prevented companies
from using so-called catastrophe models to forecast losses from wildfires; insurers could only look backward, at historical losses. Also, until last month, they could not pass on the costs of reinsurance, which is basically insurance for insurers, and which has been rising steeply in price.
In return for the changes to the rules, insurers are now required to write
more policies for homeowners in wildfire-prone areas. Some consumer
advocates condemned the deal as too favorable to the industry. Others
hoped that it would, finally, improve access to coverage. “We were all
thinking 2025 is going to be the year insurers regain their appetite for
the market in California,” Amy Bach, the executive director of United Policyholders, a California-based nonprofit, told NBC News. “Having this catastrophe hit us right out of the gate is really unfortunate.”
California is, of course, not the only state facing—or not facing up to—a climate-inflected insurance crisis. After a series of devastating hurricanes—Harvey in 2017, Ida in 2021, Helene and Milton in 2024—property owners in Florida, Louisiana, and Texas are also finding insurance
increasingly hard to afford or even obtain. The situation is similar in Colorado, where, as in California, wildfire risks are climbing. “We’re a
few bad decisions away from being where California is,” Carole Walker, the executive director of the Rocky Mountain Insurance Information
Association, told CBS.
For homeowners who can’t find fire insurance, California has an insurer of
last resort, known as the Fair Access to Insurance Requirements, or FAIR,
plan. The FAIR plan was established by the state, but it is operated by
private companies, which pool the risks. Florida, Louisiana, and Texas
have similar entities, and Colorado recently established one. As insurers
have pulled out of California, the number of policies written by the
state’s FAIR plan has risen steeply; just since late 2023, it has grown by
more than forty per cent. Meanwhile, the value of the residential
properties insured by FAIR has risen to more than four hundred and fifty billion dollars, triple what it was in 2020. This has led to worries that,
with all the damage from the current fires, the plan will go broke.
“I’m concerned that we’re one bad fire season away from complete
insolvency,” Jim Wood, then a California assemblyman, said back in March.
Were FAIR unable to meet its obligations, the state’s insurance companies
would have to make up the difference. They, in turn, would pass on at
least part of the cost of this assessment to consumers, further driving up prices.
All of which raises the question of what role insurance can—and
should—play in a warming world. As the dangers of climate change in
California have increased, FAIR has absorbed much of the risk. This has
been a boon to homeowners in the most fire-prone neighborhoods, but it
could prove a burden to other state residents if they end up picking up
the tab.
“The bet on the FAIR Plan is the state’s decision to do whatever it takes
to keep property markets working, even in risky areas, and to mute the
price signal of riskiness,” Susan Crawford, a clinical professor emeritus
at Harvard Law, wrote in a recent Substack post. “That bet may now be
being called. No one knows what will happen next.” ?
--
November 5, 2024 - Congratulations President Donald Trump. We look
forward to America being great again.
The disease known as Kamala Harris has been effectively treated and
eradicated.
We live in a time where intelligent people are being silenced so that
stupid people won't be offended.
Durham Report: The FBI has an integrity problem. It has none.
Thank you for cleaning up the disaster of the 2008-2017 Obama / Biden
fiasco, President Trump.
Under Barack Obama's leadership, the United States of America became the
The World According To Garp. Obama sold out heterosexuals for Hollywood
queer liberal democrat donors.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)