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Climate-fueled insurance crisis hits California

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May 31, 2023 View in browser
 
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By Arianna Skibell

A man on a rooftop looks at approaching flames.

A man on a rooftop looks at approaching flames as the 2013 Springs fire grows near Camarillo, Calif. | David McNew/Getty Images

From massive wildfires to turbocharged hurricanes, disasters linked to climate change are racking up billions of dollars in damage across large swaths of the country, and insurance companies are struggling to keep up.

State Farm, the largest property insurer in California, announced on Friday that it would no longer write new policies for homeowners or businesses in the state due to the high wildfire risk, writes Thomas Frank.

The stunning decision is largely due to laws and policies in California that limit the ability of insurance companies to raise rates, industry officials say. Although State Farm has huge financial reserves, the company decided that the increase in wildfires — combined with the inability to increase premiums to profitable levels — was too risky for its shareholders, Tom told Power Switch.

Michael Wara, a climate and energy policy expert at Stanford University, told Tom that State Farm’s decision to shrink “in the most valuable real estate market in the country” could threaten the broader economic picture in California, compelling other insurers in the state to take similar action.

It’s not just California. Across the country, in states like Louisiana, Colorado, Florida and Texas, property insurance systems are collapsing under the weight of climate change — even without statewide limits on rate increases.

“Property insurers have insufficient financial capacity to pay claims,” Tom told Power Switch. “In the Gulf Coast, a dozen insurers have become insolvent in the past year because they couldn't pay all of their claims.”

Hotter temperatures are creating drier, highly combustible conditions, fueling an increase in wildfires. And sea-level rise and increased wind and rainfall are fueling more destructive hurricanes and flooding.

Compounding the issue is an increase in populations in vulnerable areas like the Atlantic and Gulf coasts and areas in the West where people are building homes in once-pristine forested areas, Tom said.

It’s unlikely that a policyholder would be denied a claims payment because their insurer is broke, Tom said. States have developed backup systems to pay claims in the case of emergencies.

But costs are increasing, and those systems will continue to be tested as the rate and intensity of climate-fueled disasters grow.

 

It's Wednesday — thank you for tuning in to POLITICO's Power Switch. I'm your host, Arianna Skibell. Power Switch is brought to you by the journalists behind E&E News and POLITICO Energy. Send your tips, comments, questions to askibell@eenews.net.

 

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Rising costs weighed heavily on producers in places like West Texas, dampening their ability and willingness to drill even as demand and prices last year reached a fever pitch.

Debt deal backlash
The White House and top Democrats are working quickly to sell their allies on their deal with Republicans to raise the nation's debt ceiling, which Congress needs to pass before Monday to avoid the first U.S. default in history, write Emma Dumain and Robin Bravender.

But they are facing a major backlash from environmentalists over the decision to green-light a contentious pipeline and speed permits for energy projects.

Mining violations
The Justice Department is suing the coal empire of West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice for failing to pay more than $5 million in civil penalties assessed by the Department of the Interior, writes Kyle Cheney.

The 128-page civil action, filed Tuesday against 13 of the Justice family businesses and Justice’s adult son, comes as the governor, a Republican, launches a Senate bid against Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin.

In Other News

A Delta Airlines plane sits at the gate at Cancun International Airport (CUN) on May 26, 2023. (Photo by Daniel SLIM / AFP) (Photo by DANIEL SLIM/AFP via Getty Images)

A Delta Air Lines plane sits at the gate at Cancun International Airport on May 26. | Daniel Slim/Getty Images

Keep climbing: Consumers filed a class-action lawsuit against Delta Air Lines, contending the company inaccurately billed itself as the world’s “first carbon-neutral airline.”

Impacts: Destructive Nova Scotia wildfires forced thousands of Canadians to flee their homes.

 

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That's it for today, folks! Thanks for reading.

 

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