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Disasters cost global economy $130bn: Swiss Re

Published: 19 Dec 2013 - 07:08 am | Last Updated: 28 Jan 2022 - 07:39 pm

GENEVA: Disasters caused global economic losses of about $130bn (¤94.5bn) this year, Swiss Re said yesterday, but there was little insurance coverage for the deadliest catastrophe, Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines.
In a preliminary estimate of the impact of natural and man-made disasters, the Zurich-based reinsurance group noted that the economic impact was sharply down from $196bn in 2012, a year marked by Superstorm Sandy in the United States.
But the total loss of life climbed to about 25,000 people from 14,000 in 2012, it said.
Last month’s Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines was the deadliest single disaster, killing more than 7,000 people, Swiss Re noted.
But despite the devastation wreaked, insured losses from the typhoon are expected to be modest, it said.
It pointed to the low proportion of insurance coverage in the Philippines—a common issue in developing nations, which are also amongst the globe’s most disaster-prone countries.
Swiss Re did not release an estimate for the Philippines, but insurance- and disaster-risk modellers AIR Worldwide recently put the economic losses at $6.5-14.5bn, and insurance coverage at $300-700m.
The latter figure accounted only for physical damage to insured buildings and their contents, and did not include such areas as losses of crops or business interruption, AIR Worldwide noted.
“In many parts of the world, insurance penetration remains low,” Swiss Re’s chief economic Kurt Karl said in a statement.
“Together with preventative measures, insurance can lessen the destructive impact and financial burden that large catastrophic events can have on people’s lives. It can also help accelerate reconstruction efforts, as we have seen in areas where insurance penetration is higher,” he added.
The insurance industry is likely to cover about $44bn of the 2013 disaster losses, Swiss Re said.
It noted that the figure was substantially lower than the $81bn in payouts last year, largely down to Superstorm Sandy.
The costliest single disaster of 2013, both in terms of losses and likely insurance payouts, was the flooding in June that battered Germany, the Czech Republic and neighbouring countries in central Europe.
The floods, which claimed two dozen lives, caused economic losses of around $18bn, with $4bn of that insured, Swiss Re said.
Insured losses were nonetheless higher than during the 2002 floods in the same region, which cost the industry $3bn at current prices.
The June 2013 disaster ranked as the second most expensive fresh-water flood on record, but still lies a distant second to the 2011 Thailand floods which led to insured claims of over $16bn, Swiss Re underlined. Europe was also hit by Hailstorm Andreas in Germany and France in July, with insured losses of $3bn.
AFP