By Robert Crow, the Cool Down.
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A growing number of extreme weather events and natural disasters have pushed insurance markets to the brink, potentially impacting millions of homeowners across the United States.
What’s happening?
Politico Pro reported on an insurance crisis that has impacted several states, most notably California. An increased risk of wildfires and other severe weather events has caused some private insurance companies to raise their rates to levels that are unsustainable for many people, or to leave states completely. In 2023, State Farm announced it would no longer offer new homeowner’s insurance policies in California because of the increased risk of fire and other disasters.
To counter this, California created a state-chartered insurance plan called the FAIR Plan, which uses policy premiums to pay out claims when needed. The number of policies under the FAIR Plan, however, has nearly doubled, and its total liability is nearly $700 billion, which has many experts questioning if the plan will soon run out of money, forcing insurance companies and policyholders to pay out claims.
For example, January’s deadly Southern California wildfires created so many insurance claims that the state assessed insurers and policyholders $1 billion. Rob Moore, director of climate adaptation with the Natural Resources Defense Council, told Politico Pro that policymakers “have a huge challenge ahead of them. And it’s a climate resilience and climate risk challenge they’re facing.”
Why is this concerning?
That risk has only grown because of human-caused pollution. As we burn dirty fuels, we release massive amounts of heat-trapping pollution into the atmosphere. That pollution has caused global temperatures to increase to record-breaking levels, with the last decade seeing the 10 warmest years in recorded history.
Those temperature increases cause more frequent and severe weather events, such as hurricanes, floods, and wildfires. The connection is so strong that one expert likened increasing global temperatures to “steroids for weather.”