Wisconsin Independent Agent | July 2022 Magazine

Page 20

PERSONAL LINES

FLOOD RISKS ARE RISING ARE YOUR CLIENTS PREPARED? Are your clients, both commercial and personal, at a greater flood risk than they know? If your clients rely solely on the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) flood maps, your clients' property may be at much higher risk than predicted by FEMA maps. According to the New York Times, FEMA maps do not account for intense rainfall-created flooding. Climate challenges change flood risks throughout the US and abroad Until recently, reinsurers considered flood risks “secondary perils." Primary perils are events that generate large losses and are routinely “modeled," such as earthquakes and tropical cyclones. Many carriers had considered flooding a “secondary peril," a smaller or mid-sized event. However, those days are gone, according to one expert in a recent Burns & Wilcox online seminar on flooding risks. Flood risk is a major concern to today's insurers and reinsurers. In the U.S. according to CBS news, over 700,000 commercial real estate buildings, apartments, malls and office complexes face flooding risk in 2022 that could reduce business access and incur economic losses approaching $50 billion yearly. Homeowners, too, face significant flooding risks from rising inland waters, coastal storms, increased rainfall, and other water-related deluges. Add increased urban infill and greater population growth along coastlines to the mix and your insureds may not recognize the risks facing them.

20 | JULY 2022 |

wisconsin INDEPENDENT AGENT

A New Tool to Measure Flood and Wildfire Risks A non-profit, First Street Foundation, formed by academics and climate experts, offers a free, online tool that analyzes current flood data to predict a property's flood risk. The tool categorizes flood risk from minor to extreme. After entering an address, you will receive a “Risk Factor™" analysis, with floodrisk categories ranging from minor to extreme. The analysis includes flooding that can occur from swollen rivers, rainfall, tidal flooding, and storm surge. Enter the property location to determine its risk of flooding and wildfire. An article in the New York Times stated that Risk Factor showed a “vast increase in [flood] risk compared with official estimates." Even updated flood maps are “decades old," according to the Times article, and Risk Factor includes areas not yet mapped in some instances. The article went on to say that even though Risk Factor may “overestimate some risks," FEMA welcomed the additional input provided by Risk Factor. Relying Solely on FEMA Flood Maps Can Be Problematic First Street Foundation evaluated the City of Chicago's flood risks. While FEMA maps showed that 0.3% of properties in Chicago were within the 100year flood zone, First Street found about 13% of the Chicago properties were in danger of flooding. This was more than 75,000 properties than FEMA maps predicted.


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