Increase in insurance losses caused by North Atlantic hurricanes in a warmer climate

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Abstract

North Atlantic hurricanes are a major driver of property losses in the United States and a critical peril for the reinsurance industry globally. We leverage insurance loss data and stochastic modeling to investigate the impacts of projected changes in hurricane climatology on the insurance industry, for +2 °C and +4 °C warming scenarios. We find that, relative to the historical baseline 1950-2022, expected changes in wind speed and rainfall may increase hurricane losses by 5% −15% (+2 °C) and 10% − 30% (+4 °C), with greater impacts at lower return periods than in the tail. The historical 100-year loss event may therefore be exceeded on average every 80 years (+2 °C) and 70 years (+4 °C). The expected changes in average annual loss are projected to be 10% (+2 °C) and 15% (+4 °C), with the largest relative increase attributable to precipitation-induced losses. Under the extreme SSP5-8.5 scenario, the expected loss inflation due to climate change is thus on the order of 0.5% per annum.

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APA

Comola, F., Märtl, B., Paul, H., Bruns, C., & Sapelza, K. (2024). Increase in insurance losses caused by North Atlantic hurricanes in a warmer climate. Communications Earth and Environment, 5(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s43247-024-01824-7

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