EMAIL SIGN UP!
Most Popular This Week
- Report: Toxic Chemicals Found in Thousands of Children's Products
- Move Over, Koch Brothers: A Bigger, Darker Rightwing Funder Is Out to Destroy Public Education
- You and Your Family Are Guinea Pigs for the Chemical Corporations
- After Boston, Eyes-Wide Open Hope?
- The Life and Death of Words, People, and Even Nature
Popular content
Today's Top News
Why The Insurance Industry Gets Climate Change
Insurance companies understand risk – which is why, unlike our myopic political class, they do not have their heads in the sand
When it comes to climate change, the US Congress is a hornets' nest of political dysfunction. In May, President Barack Obama nominated energy executive John Bryson to lead the commerce department. From the response of congressional Republicans, you might have thought Obama had nominated Ed Abbey and Rachel Carson's imaginary love child.
A damaged car in Joplin, Missouri, 22 May 2011 after a tornado hit the town; Reuters has estimated the cost to insurers of tornado damage in Joplin alone at $3bn. (Photograph: Str/Reuters)
In 2009, Bryson had the audacity to support a cap-and-trade system to address climate change and, 40 years earlier, he helped launch the Natural Resource Defence Council. This spurred Darrell Issa (Republican, California) to deride him as a "green evangelist", while Senator John Barrasso (Republican, Wyoming) called Bryson an "environmental extremist" and Senator James Inhofe (Republican, Oklahoma) pegged him as "a founder of a radical environmental organisation".
Symptomatic of climate change deniers driving the Beltway discussion, the Washington Post recently relegated global warming to "second-tier issue" status. However, for one powerful sector of the economy – and one that's a hefty contributor to congressional campaigns – it's a first-tier issue: the insurance industry.
While climate zombies in Congress are lurching in lockstep toward environmental catastrophe, the insurance industry has been scrambling to act. It's well past time we listened to what they have to say. Insofar as the Republican party is the party of business, they might want to lend an ear as well.
Insurance companies have a vested interest in reducing the risks of climate change. Like scientists and the military, they're used to dealing with and planning for uncertainty. As scientists have made clear, climate change is cranking up the dial on extreme weather. Over the last 30 years, catastrophic economic losses have been rising (pdf) with the global temperature, which chops into insurance firms' profits. With landscapes and livelihoods being sucked into the extreme weather vortex, insurance firm executives – especially in Europe – are getting the message.
The insurance industry is all about risk assessment and capital accumulation. Katrina-like catastrophes lurk on the discernibly warmer horizon, giving insurance companies a real deal incentive to slice against the zeitgeist of denial. As Frank Nutter, president of the Reinsurance Association of America, told the select committee on energy independence and global warming in 2007, "The insurance industry's financial interest is inter-dependent with climate and weather."
Over the last five years, the insurance industry has become increasingly proactive on climate change, in terms of both underwriting and investment. Reinsurance companies – essentially firms that insure the insurers to manage and defray risk – have taken the lead. In September 2007, insurance firms formed ClimateWise in order to reduce economic risk associated with climate change.
That same year, Andrew Castaldi, head of the catastrophe risk unit for the Swiss Re America Corp, testified to the Senate's homeland security and governmental affairs committee, "We believe unequivocally that climate change presents an increasing risk to the world economy and social welfare."
In 2008, Ernst & Young – not known for having to peel bark from their sweater vests after intensive treehugging sessions – named climate change the number one risk to the insurance industry. In a 2009 report, Lloyd's of London warned of climate change contributing to "resource-driven conflicts; economic damage and risk to coastal cities and infrastructure; loss of territory and resultant border disputes; environmentally induced migration; government fragility; political radicalisation; tensions over energy supplies and pressures on international governance".
And this month, while US media fail to consistently connect the dots between weather patterns and climate change, Munich Re – the world's biggest reinsurer – stated plainly, "weather extremes such as the massive floods experienced by China since early June are due to the advance of climate change." While acknowledging factors like population growth and rising property values – especially in risk-prone areas – Munich Re wrote, "it would seem that the growing number of weather-related catastrophes can only be explained by climate change."
Unlike the "poisonous polluters and rightwing ideologues" Al Gore recently skewered in Rolling Stone, the insurance industry is perfectly willing to rely on the scientific consensus as put forth by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Citing the IPCC, Munich Re noted, "The view that weather extremes are more frequent and intense due to global warming is in keeping with current scientific findings." Meanwhile, on the investment side, Munich Re is jacking up its investments in renewable energy assets and operations, while assigning SunPower Corp to develop a massive, 2.5 megawatt solar power system for its offices in New Jersey.
Let's be clear: insurance firms aren't altruists; they're capitalists. A rise in extreme weather means a fall in their profits. This is hardball economics based on risk analysis, not save-the-polar-bears stuff.
European reinsurers have taken the lead in this outburst of rational behaviour, with their counterparts in the US lagging in their wake. In Europe, insurance companies have pressured their governments to push policies that mitigate the human role in climate change, while in the US, insurance firms have tended to focus more on extreme weather events and how to adapt to them.
Quite logically, property insurance companies are taking the lead, with life and health insurance firms trailing behind. Reuters recently reported the spate of tornadoes in the US midwest will cost insurers more than $7bn, while the twister in Joplin, Missouri alone will spawn a $3bn bill. Insurance companies are perfectly willing to pass along premium hikes to consumers, but they're also up for concerted CO2 regulation that could eventually assuage the pocks on their profits.
Meanwhile, the political winds in the Washington have a strong whiff of petroleum. But the insurance industry is also a big-time lobby and donor to political campaigns. In the 2010 election cycle, oil and gas lobbyists spent more than $145m, while insurance industry lobbyists doled out more than $157m. Granted, much of the insurance money went to squelching meaningful heathcare reform, but the industry could throw its political weight around if it wanted to. Cash clogs the arteries of American democracy, but it can also help get things done. If nothing else, congressional climate cranks should take notice that a major industry treats climate change seriously.
The insurance industry can only take us so far. We need political leadership – and a vibrant, fully-mobilised social movement pushing that leadership – to make it the rest of the way. With climate change perilously approaching irreversibility, our time is running out.
Comments
Note: Disqus 2012 is best viewed on an up to date browser. Click here for information. Instructions for how to sign up to comment can be viewed here. Our Comment Policy can be viewed here. Please follow the guidelines. Note to Readers: Spam Filter May Capture Legitimate Comments...


7 Comments so far
Show All"We need political leadership – and a vibrant, fully-mobilised social movement pushing that leadership,"
To achieve that, there would need to be a media-ready figure so charismatic and so focused and so insistent that mainstream media could not ignore him or her. As yet no such person has appeared on the scene. It can be said that people who speak out about things like this are ignored and marginalized by the mainstream media. This is utterly true, but someone with sufficient star quality could, if he or she kept at it, possibly be able to bypass the marginalization mechanisms. Unless someone appears on the scene who can personify the kind of leadership that is needed, I doubt if the insurance companies will step forth to save the day. But I could be wrong. Still, my experience with insurance companies is not one that would lead me to suspect that help is coming from that quarter.
I agree that no help will come from the insurance industry. I suspect that their concerns will be addressed by raising rates (which are paid by the insured), not by lobbying Congress to do something. The public comments they make do not indicate their willingness to do something. They will just serve to justify raising the rates.
Paranoid,
Perhaps the person you are talking about is Jesus. Could this be his time of return?
I like the comment made about the media and how it ca not connect CC with extreme weather. During the tornados Wolfe asked what on Earth is going on? Sad lil twit.
I actually work for the largest personal lines insurer in the US (I assure you, we are not evil as some would suggest). My company has been doing lobbying work on behlf of climate change for well over the 10 years that I have worked here. I'm not naive to think that that it's not becuase it's in the company's financial benefit, but at least it's a start.
Insurance industry does get hit with a double bunger on climate change. Its global, so the likelyhood of finding low risk investments anywhere decreases. The company cannot so easily invest their funds so they grow in value. And climate change causes more payouts, which hits the premium model. The premium model starts to fall to bits, when they rise to the extent that clients cannot afford to pay. On the gold coast of East Australia, cyclone insurance has risen so much, that apartment owners cannot afford to pay. Insurance industry depends on low risk, and social capacity to pay. Climate change is growing risks and costs.
It's been a few years, now, since the Pentagon came out with the assertion that climate change represented a major threat to the "national security" of the United States. With the insurance industry chiming in, and with good reason, one would hope that an incremental reduction in the size and influence of the "global-warming-denial" bloc will get underway. The sooner the better......