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Los Angeles fires, US storms dominate insurance losses in first half of 2025.
Los Angeles fires, US storms dominate insurance losses in first half of 2025.

Straits Times

time2 days ago

  • Business
  • Straits Times

Los Angeles fires, US storms dominate insurance losses in first half of 2025.

People attempt to save a neighboring home from catching fire as a home burns during the Eaton Fire in Altadena, California, on Jan 8. SINGAPORE – The first half of 2025 is among the most costly periods for the insurance industry, with disasters in the US, including wildfires in Los Angeles in January, dominating natural disaster losses across the planet, Munich Re said on July 29. The global re-insurer said the first six months' total losses from natural disasters were about US$131 billion (S$168 billion), of which US$80 billion was insured – the second highest of any half-year period since 1980, according to the company's records. About half of this, or US$40 billion, was due to the record wildfires that swept across parts of Los Angeles. 'Climate change is shifting more and more the probabilities of extreme weather,' said Munich Re chief climate scientist Tobias Grimm. He said the trend from climate change-linked losses was increasing. The good news was that much more could be done to reduce the risks and costs to insurance companies and their customers. Weather disasters caused 88 per cent of overall losses and 98 per cent of insured losses during the first half of the year, while earthquakes accounted for 12 per cent and 2 per cent respectively, Munich Re said. Losses from severe storms, including tornadoes, in the US totalled US$34 billion in the first six months of 2025, with about US$26 billion of this being insured. Losses in the Asia-Pacific and Africa totalled around US$29 billion, of which about US$5 billion was insured. Top stories Swipe. Select. Stay informed. Singapore Terrorism threat in Singapore remains high, driven by events like Israeli-Palestinian conflict: ISD Singapore Online platforms have halved time it takes for Singaporeans to be self-radicalised: ISD Asia Extreme weather turns Beijing into rain trap; 30 killed, over 80,000 evacuated Asia Meeting between Cambodian-Thai militaries postponed, as acting Thai PM says border calm Singapore NDP 2025: Enhanced security measures to be put in place around the Padang Business SIA shares tumble after 59% first-quarter profit slide Singapore Motorcyclist hurt after car crashes into bollard next to Clementi coffee shop Sport World Cup winner Fabio Cannavaro among list of top names for Singapore football coach The deadliest non-climate linked disaster was the magnitude 7.7 earthquake in Myanmar on March 28 that killed 4,500 people. It caused US$12 billion in damage but only a small percentage of this was insured. A May 2025 report by the Geneva Association, a global association of insurance companies, said annual insured losses have exceeded US$100 billion annually for every year since 2020 and are expected to surpass US$200 billion in 2025. In 2024, they were about US$140 billion. The risks from wildfires were growing not only in their intensity and size but also affecting areas that were less vulnerable before, such as the recent wildfires in South Korea, said Mr Grimm. Thunderstorms, flash floods and tropical storms were also growing in intensity and affecting more people and places and costing insurers more. In the United States, the National Weather Service has already issued more than 3,600 flash flood warnings across the nation in 2025, and the number could soon exceed its yearly average of around 4,000 flash flood warnings, said Jeffrey Basara, Professor of Meteorology at the University of Massachusetts Lowell, in The Conversation news site on July 24. A July 4 flash flood in Texas Hill Country killed nearly 140 people, including more than two dozen children. Mr Grimm told The Straits Times that another area of growing concern is the risk from rock falls and glacial lake outbursts, pointing to the glacier collapse on May 28 in the Swiss Alps, which triggered a massive landslide that destroyed the village of Blatten. He said the risk of similar events is growing as a warming planet speeds up the melting of glaciers in mountain areas, including the Himalayas. This can also cause the creation of glacial lakes that fill up quickly behind a dam caused by a rockfall. When the dam bursts, a deadly torrent of mud and rock wipes out everything in its path. The increasing impacts of extreme weather is driving up insurance costs or leading to no coverage at all in some places, triggering falling property prices and banks denying mortgage approvals. 'For example, in Australia, 15 per cent of properties face affordability stress, while in some parts of the US and Canada, rising risks and regulatory pressures to cap premiums have forced insurers to limit or cease coverage for some perils,' the Geneva Association said. In large parts of Asia, the problem is lack of coverage altogether because it was not offered or was too costly, with repeat disasters entrenching poverty. One of the key reasons insurance losses have risen over the years is because of the growing wealth and population of nations and the increasing size and density of cities. In other words, more assets and more people placed in the way of floods, storms and wildfires. Add in the rising impacts of climate change and this raises the chances of deadly and costly disasters. In Los Angeles, some homes were in forested areas or canyons highly prone to wildfires. Elsewhere, cities have expanded on to flood plains or coastal areas prone to storm damage. Plenty can be done to reduce the risks. Key is getting out of harm's way. 'To reduce future exposure, new building development should not be allowed in high-risk areas,' said Munich Re management board member Thomas Blunck in a statement accompanying the first-half loss report. Other steps include better building codes, early warning systems, strengthening existing infrastructure and building new infrastructure that can better withstand worsening floods, storms and fires, as well as better understanding of evolving climate risks by the public, governments and local councils. 'Embedding climate risks in all aspects of the property markets could help to make these markets more sustainable in the long run. A lot more can be done in this regard,' Mr Grimm said.

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