Climate change and managing its impacts are very important issues for insurers – if nothing else, because they cover some of those impacts through their products.
These include damages caused by flooding, storms or droughts. When climate change affects the frequency and intensity of weather events, it also has consequences for insurers. In the Ahr valley, for example, the insured loss was four times as high as the second-largest insured loss from a natural disaster in Germany, namely, the flooding in 2013. Such leaps in the loss amount aren’t statistical outliers; they can be observed around the world.
As investors with often large portfolios, insurers play an important part in the necessary transformation of the economy and society by, for example, making targeted investments in renewable energy facilities such as wind farms, or by no longer investing in high-emissions areas like oil production. The same applies to their products. New technologies in the fields of power generation, transport, energy storage and industrial production are needed to limit global warming. Insurers are working on insurance solutions that make it easier to bring these technologies to market.