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Today’s newsletter looks at wildfires from the perspectives of insurers and homeowners. First, risk experts explain the challenging task of modeling wildfires like the ones seen in Los Angeles this month.

Later, homeowners who’ve been through the process of making a claim after a blaze share their painful experience. You can find both of these stories on Bloomberg.com. For more climate and energy news, please subscribe.

The struggle to predict big fires

By Gautam Naik

Among natural disasters, wildfires are the great unknown. Even the most-sophisticated scientific models fail to capture all the risk factors or properly account for the increasing impact of climate change.

It's a major problem for homeowners, insurers and investors, as shown by this month’s Los Angeles blazes that partly or completely incinerated more than 14,000 structures, including several thousand homes, according to local authorities.

While wildfire risks for the area were broadly known, what surprised almost everyone has been the ferocity of the disaster. That’s when specialty analysts are supposed to fill the void by finding new ways to anticipate the threats of an increasingly unsettled world.

The burned interior of Altadena Hardware following the Eaton Fire in Altadena, California on Monday, Jan. 20. Photographer: Kyle Grillot/Bloomberg

Wildfire risk is notoriously hard to predict because of factors such as rising temperature levels, as well as different vegetation, wind speeds and topographies. It’s also one of the few natural disasters where human intervention — the use of fire retardants, for example — can materially alter the outcome.

“When an area has very little or no inherent risk, you don’t need a lot of variables to assess risk levels, and the models tend to agree,” said Tammy Nichols Schwartz, senior director of analytics at Guidewire Software Inc., an insurance solutions provider. As the perceived threat gets greater in an area, “the accuracy of the models can vary tremendously.”

Moody’s RMS Event Response estimates that insured losses from the Los Angeles wildfires will range from $20 billion to $30 billion. That’s on top of the $79 billion, or 60% of the $132 billion of total wildfire losses, that insurers paid out globally over the last decade, according to Munich Re.

Wildfires are “a complicated peril to model,” said Julia Borman, an industry expert at Verisk Analytics Inc., which works with the insurance industry on catastrophe modeling. What makes the process especially challenging is the homes and buildings that “you’re trying to protect are often providing the fuel for the peril,” she said.

In high-risk areas, models work best when there is a large amount of granular data. How close are homes to one another? Is there a “defensible space” between a structure and the surrounding area so the fire department can safely defend a structure? Are there vents through which through which wind-borne embers can enter?

Global warming adds another layer of complexity when forecasting wildfire frequency and intensity. Models have to be updated “every year or two because the climate is changing so rapidly,” said Daniel Ward, director of model development at Karen Clark & Co.

California, where wildfire risk levels are particularly high, recently announced plans to build the country’s first “public wildfire risk model” with the goal of improving loss forecasts and helping insurers set fair and accurate insurance rates. Verisk said earlier this month that it was first in requesting a review of its wildfire model by the California Department of Insurance.

A home destroyed by the Eaton Fire in Pasadena, California  on Friday, Jan. 17. Photographer: Jill Connelly/Bloomberg

Two wildfire-risk models dominated the market between 1997 and 2020, according to Guidewire’s Schwartz. Each used only three variables and the results didn’t always agree, she said.

Today’s risk-assessment tools, including one developed by Guidewire, incorporate a lot more variables such as wildfire history, fire-suppression capabilities and maximum annual temperature, Schwartz said.

It’s not always enough. Guidewire’s 2023 model included an assessment of high winds, but not hurricane-force winds. The ruinous fires that occurred that year in Hawaii provided a stark lesson. In that fire, it turned out that the wind from an offshore hurricane played a big role in reigniting fires that destroyed the town of Lahaina.

“Our new wildfire model will incorporate maximum wind speeds at each location, regardless of the cause,” Schwartz said.

Still, investors are skeptical whether risk modelers will ever nail down all the variables behind fires like the ones in Los Angeles.

Icosa Investments rarely invests in catastrophe bonds with material exposure to wildfires, said Chief Executive Officer Florian Steiger. “When you look at the models, there’s a divergence between modeled losses and economic reality,” he said.

Neuberger Berman will invest in multi-peril “cat bonds” that are issued by large insurers such as Allstate Corp., according to managing director Sophie Ware.

Still, Neuberger worries about “inadequate pricing given the known unknowns in the modeling,” she said.

Getting out of town 

70%
This is the percentage of policies that State Farm, California’s biggest insurer, cut in a ZIP code central to Pacific Palisades last year.

Safety not guaranteed

"The likelihood of getting these wicked dry conditions and the Santa Ana winds to start the whole thing going is increasing in probability. It won't be in the same place every time, but all of the ingredients that go into fire weather are getting worse."
Jennifer Francis
Senior scientist at the Woodwell Climate Research Center
In the future, Southern California is likely to see more extreme fires erupting during the winter months, leaving millions of residents — and some of the country’s most valuable real estate — in the crosshairs.

Homeowners battle insurance claims

By Olivia Raimonde and Alexandre Rajbhandari

Annie Compton had just put her two young daughters to bed when she heard pounding on the front door. “You gotta get out, you gotta get out now,” her neighbor said.

Compton abandoned the lunches she was preparing for the next day, grabbed some documents and her husband’s hard drive, loaded the kids and two dogs into her minivan and fled. By morning, there was nothing to return to. The wildfires have been burning for two weeks.

“We went to a hotel and I just knew, because we could see the flames,” Compton said. “I knew we weren't going to have a house.”

Annie Compton is currently staying with family in Minneapolis. Photographer: Ben Brewer/Bloomberg

As the last of the embers from what’s set to be the costliest wildfire on record are tamped out, Compton and thousands of Los Angeles residents who lost their homes have a new nightmare to face: completing an insurance claim so they can begin to rebuild their lives. For many, the process will likely take years and result in a lower payout than they expect.

Survivors of recent wildfires recounted painstaking attempts to claw back enough cash to rebuild what they lost. They had to contend with unsympathetic customer service agents, demands from insurers for documentation long turned to ashes and discoveries that their policies don’t cover anywhere near the amount needed to replace their home and personal belongings. Many regretted not digitizing their insurance paperwork in advance.

In a warming world where fires have become more frequent and burn for longer, the scale of destruction is pushing an already byzantine system to its breaking point. “Climate change is definitely causing there to be more claims,” said Amy Bach, executive director of United Policyholders, a consumer advocacy group that focuses on the insurance industry. “You can’t deny that.”

Read the full story on Bloomberg.com. 

More from Green 

For more than 15 years, the US federal government has slapped limits on greenhouse gas emissions based on a conclusion that planet-warming pollution imperils public health and welfare. 

But now President Donald Trump has launched an attack on the government’s 2009 ruling, tasking his incoming environmental chief with determining its continued “legality and continuing applicability.”

The direction — contained in one of several energy-related executive actions by Trump in his first day in office — sets the stage for a potentially vast policy upheaval, one that could immediately sweep away the legal foundation for regulations governing emissions from power plants, oil wells and automobiles. 

“With the stroke of a pen, Trump is attempting to end the EPA’s ability to regulate greenhouse gas emissions,” said Dominique Browning, director of Moms Clean Air Force, an environmental advocacy group. If successful, the gambit would mean the US has “no federal path in place for cutting the pollution that is rapidly destabilizing our climate and putting our weather on steroids,” she said. 

US President Donald Trump signs executive orders in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC on Monday on Jan. 20. Photographer: Jim Lo Scalzo/EPA

EU politicians condemn Trump’s anti-climate moves. European leaders at the World Economic Forum bristled as Trump announced an exit from the landmark Paris Agreement. “Europe will stay the course and keep working with all nations that want to protect nature and stop global warming,” European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen said in Davos.

The Los Angeles wildfires are an unmissable signal for investors. Venture capitalist Bill Clerico says the blazes are a sign to back startups aimed at mitigating and preventing similar disasters in the future. The founder of Convective Capital says there are “huge incentives” now to invest in so-called adaptation technologies.

UBS is considering joining Wall Street’s climate group retreat. Chief Executive Officer Sergio Ermotti said he’s looking at whether to follow peers in abandoning a key climate-finance alliance, as lenders seek to protect themselves from intensifying political pressure.

Worth a listen

As the blazes in Los Angeles continue to burn, those who have lost their homes are contending with the immediate need for shelter– and difficult questions about whether or not to rebuild in the fire zone. Grist reporter Jake Bittle tells Akshat Rathi how California’s housing market and insurance regulations will shape the recovery. And Nomad Century author Gaia Vince says that in this era of climate instability, everyone should think about how prepared they are to become a climate migrant. Listen now, and subscribe on Apple,  Spotify, or YouTube to get new episodes of Zero every Thursday.

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