What counts, in the end, methinks. - Keith

http://www.planetark.com/dailynewsstory.cfm/newsid/40182/story.htm

Insurers Welcome UN Climate Panel Report

UK: February 5, 2007

LONDON - Insurers, which pay out billions of dollars each year on 
natural disasters, welcomed the publication on Friday of a 
hard-hitting warning by the UN climate panel that human activities 
are heating the planet.

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), the most 
authoritative group on global warming comprising 2,500 scientists 
from more than 130 nations, predicted severe rains, melting glaciers, 
droughts, heat waves and rising sea levels.

"We believe this report will be very helpful in establishing climate 
change at the top of the (global political) agenda," Ivo Menzinger, 
head of sustainability and emerging risks at Swiss Re , the world's 
largest reinsurer by premiums, told journalists in a telephone 
briefing.

For insurers, who invest huge sums in conducting their own research 
into climate change, the report's findings came as no surprise.

But the industry, around one-third of whose overall claims are from 
weather-related natural disasters, hopes the report will galvanise 
governments into doing more to combat accelerating global warming.

Insurers paid out over US$83 billion on damages from a string of US 
hurricanes in 2005, making it the costliest year in the industry's 
history.

The IPCC report "reflects concerns about the future state of the 
world that we share. As an insurer, we cannot ignore the fact that 
the incidence of large natural catastrophes has increased over the 
past few years," said Peter Buomberger, group head of government and 
industry affairs at Zurich Financial Services.

By stating compelling evidence for climate change while debunking 
some of the theories raised by climate change sceptics, the report 
"will prove to be a milestone in bringing the debate forward", 
Menzinger said.

PREMIUMS MAY RISE

Allianz, one of Europe's largest insurers, warned insurance premiums 
would have to rise if climate change causes natural disasters to 
become more frequent and more devastating.

"Thus far, our industry has always based insurance premiums on 
analysis of past data. However, if the UN Panel's conclusions 
regarding more frequent and extreme weather events are realised, we 
will increasingly have to account for such climate projections," said 
Olaf Novak, head of the company's reinsurance natural catastrophe 
team.

Recent research by Swiss Re into European winter storms forecast they 
would increase in frequency and intensity thanks to climate change by 
2100, leading to an increase in insured claims by 16 to 68 percent.

Earlier this month, Europe was buffeted by the Kyrill storm, the 
worst to hit the continent in years with hurricane-force winds 
cutting a swathe from Britain to Poland, which insurers estimate 
could cost them between 2.5 billion and 8 billions euros 
(US$3.3-US$10.4 billion).

"The good news is we still have time to adapt. Building codes can be 
changed to make buildings more resilient, and mitigating actions, in 
the sense of reducing emissions, will help prevent this (increasing 
winter storms) scenario from materialising," Menzinger said.

Story by Simon Challis, European Insurance Correspondent

REUTERS NEWS SERVICE


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