CALIFORNIA
FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CLIMATE CHANGE BEHIND COMING FIRE INSURANCE CRISIS”
FOR RELEASE: TUESDAY, JANUARY 23, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CLIMATE CHANGE BEHIND COMING FIRE INSURANCE CRISIS”
Climate change, if you ask most state
experts, has already created a wildfire crisis in California. In the process,
it’s causing a fire insurance predicament.
“All hell is breaking loose,” was Gov.
Jerry Brown’s sum-up on national television of the effects climate change and
its wildly variable and unpredictable weather patterns have had in fire-ravaged
parts of the state.
Anyone who tuned into broadcast press
conferences by top-level firefighters during the blazes of both September and
December also heard them bemoaning the changes global warming has brought to
their jobs. As Brown noted, with only slight exaggeration, “The fire season
used to be a couple of months in the summer; now we’re in December.”
Before 2017, California sometimes saw
major wildfires as late as early- to mid-November, but almost never deep into
December, a time when the annual rainy season has usually been well under way.
But all fall a persistent atmospheric high-pressure ridge prevented rain clouds
from moving into much of the state.
One result was fires that lasted
weeks, feeding off vegetation that mushroomed after last year’s unusually wet
winter and then dried out almost completely, leaving huge amounts of fuel for
fires.
Most of the more than 2,000 homes and
other structures destroyed in this year’s far longer than usual fire season
were insured, some owners paying extra-high premiums because they’re in known
fire areas.
At the height of the infernos, state
Insurance Commissioner Dave Jones warned the new year-round threat to homes in
many parts of the state could change the entire fire insurance marketplace.
This crisis is real, but it’s not yet
widespread even though some homeowners have already gotten notices of
non-renewal from insurance companies. Those are likely harbingers of many more
to come.
Jones noted in an interview that insurance companies can’t cancel
policies during their term. They must also renew policies for homes in fire
disaster areas for at least one more year after any current policy expires. But
they don’t have to renew policies in non-disaster areas when they expire and
they don’t have to renew homes in disaster areas more than one year beyond current
policy expirations.
These rules mean there is a crisis,
spurred largely by new weather conditions that have broadened areas rated as
fire-prone. But this insurance availability crisis won’t look like what
happened after the 1994 Northridge Earthquake, when property insurance
companies refused to renew many existing policies and stopped writing new home
and business insurance in the state. That impasse ended in 1996 with creation
of the California Earthquake Authority and elimination of an old rule under
which companies writing any property insurance also had to offer quake
coverage. The state-run CEA now writes the vast majority of earthquake
policies.
“It’s possible some insurers will
reduce their willingness to write policies in areas at risk for fires,” Jones
said. The state’s Fair Plan, roughly equivalent to the CEA in that it must
insure anyone who applies, is the fallback for homeowners in places now deemed
fodder for future burns. Fire insurance through the Fair Plan costs more than
ordinary policies, although by law prices cannot be excessive. But rates vary
according to home replacement values and fire risk.
Before last year’s blazes, the number
of Fair Plan policies was rising by about 1,000 per year, Jones reported. That
figure climbed in 2017 and likely will again this year. He added that
homeowners should view the Fair Plan as a fallback option to be used only if no
commercial insurer will cover them.
One factor pushing some insurance
companies to stop writing policies might be the 1988 Proposition 103, which
forbids them from packing all their costs from last year’s fires into this
year’s rates. Instead, compensation for those costs must be spread over 20
years to avoid big financial shocks to homeowners.
Overall, said Jones, “insurers are
using more and more sophisticated (computer) models to determine risk factors.
Some of those models might cause them to back off writing insurance in some
areas.”
All of which means climate change now is
impacting wallets, forcing an insurance crisis in both proven and potential
fire disaster areas.
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Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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