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Insurers brace for another big year of extreme weather claims

Thursday, 21 July 2022

Thursday morning brought widespread flooding of the Heathcote River flooding in St Martins, Christchurch.

Insurers are bracing for another big year of weather-related claims.

Wild weather is battering parts of the country, with high winds and flooding prompting insurers to brace for calls from homeowners with damaged homes and vehicles.

“The cost of extreme weather events is just going up and up. We have just had a record year for insured losses, which exceeded the previous year,“ said Tim Grafton, chief executive of the Insurance Council of New Zealand Te Kāhui Inihua o Aotearoa​.

“Currently we are on track, and who knows what the next months will show, for another very big year of losses,” he said.

**READ MORE:

* Damage from extreme weather cost insurers $321.6 million last year

* Insurers pay record $305 million for extreme weather claims in 2021

* Why some insurance premiums are about to go up

Flooding around Christchurch on Thursday.
Flooding around Christchurch on Thursday.

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Total weather-related insurance costs reached a record high in 2021 at $322million, ICNZ said, beating the 2020 record of $274m​.

ICNZ’s online natural disaster tracker shows that in the first five months of the year, insurers faced three major weather-related events that will cost them an estimated $143m​.

The Levin tornado looks likely to cost insurers more than $8m.
The Levin tornado looks likely to cost insurers more than $8m.

It’s not only the trend for an increasing number of extreme weather events that was setting a new record each year.

The cost of used cars, and the cost of building new homes has skyrocketed in the past 12 months, meaning the cost of settling each claim had risen dramatically.

“Building inflation has gone up by about 18%,” Grafton said.

The costs calculated by insurers painted only part of the picture, as extreme weather events caused damage to things that were not insured which could add as much as 40% or more to the real costs to property-owners, ICNZ estimates.

The tornado in Levin on May 20 looks set to cost insurers over $8m, data from ICNZ shows.

IAG chief executive Amanda Whiting says New Zealanders were concerned with the impacts of climate change.
IAG chief executive Amanda Whiting says New Zealanders were concerned with the impacts of climate change.

The March floods in the North Island would cost insurers more than $80m. February‘s Cyclone Dovi resulted in claims costs of about $55m.

In April insurer IAG, which owns the State, NZI and AMI brands, launched its ‘wild weather tracker” newsletter, which it intends to publish regularly.

The insurer also set up an online disaster hub for its customers seeking advice, and making claims, as a result of wild weather, or other natural disasters.

In the first of the newsletters, issued in April, Amanda Whiting, IAG’s chief executive said: “We see first-hand the impact of climate change through changing weather patterns on our communities.

“We know that New Zealand’s weather can be unpredictable, but our claims data clearly shows that severe weather is becoming more frequent and more damaging to people’s homes and property.

“We expect that these events will only increase as our climate warms,” she said.

Advice from IAG to homeowners suffering flood damage: