Jasper wildfire latest disaster in climate claim deluge facing Canada’s
Hotter summers in Canada that have sparked wildfires in tourist areas, intense hailstorms and thunderstorms with severe flooding in major cities, all likely linked to climate change, are leading to personnel shortages and potentially claims adjustment delays, according to insurance sector insiders.
The industry depends on teams of insurance adjusters to look into claims and determine the amount of loss, or damages covered by insurance policies. They are a vital cog in a business being stretched thin by mounting claims from homeowners and businesses.
Insurance claims are rising globally as climate change spurs more severe weather, but Canada is particularly at risk as one of the world’s most vast and forested lands.
Many adjusters are retiring and certifications are different in each province, making it challenging for Canada to handle increased claims, companies, consumers and industry groups told Reuters.
“These events have placed immense pressure on insurance adjusters, who are critical following natural catastrophes, as they ensure the industry can support consumers as quickly as possible,” Insurance Bureau of Canada, an industry group, said.
In August, insurance adjusters toured Jasper by bus after firefighters had battled a blaze that damaged or destroyed a third of all buildings in the mountain community, making it the second-most expensive wildfire in Alberta’s history by insured losses.
The fire surpassed $880 million in insured damages, according to initial estimates from Catastrophe Indices and Quantification, the Insurance Bureau of Canada said.
WATCH |Returning evacuees sift through the ashes in Jasper:
Globally, many insurers have coped with unexpected claims in recent years, mainly by raising premiums and excluding some businesses.
Intact Financial, Canada’s biggest property and casualty insurer, insures about 700 families and businesses in the Jasper area. It estimates about 250 policyholders had damage in Jasper. It expects losses within its annual range of $900 million for all catastrophic events.
The insurance division of TD, Canada’s second-largest bank, said weather events in August, including Calgary hailstorms and Montreal floods, would lead to claims and related costs of more than $300 million in the fourth quarter, after it recorded claims costs of $186 million due to floods in Toronto and Alberta wildfires in July.
Record wildfires
Last year, wildfires burned 18.5 million hectares of land, more than double than the previous record set two decades ago, turning European and American skies orange and the air grey.
Over the last 10 years, the number of Canadian claims tied to extreme weather events has risen to more than 1.3 million, up 93 per cent from a decade ago,…
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