Rabu, 19 Januari 2011

The Star Online: World Updates

The Star Online: World Updates


Climate change growing risk for insurers - industry

Posted: 19 Jan 2011 06:58 AM PST

SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Insurers are struggling to assess the risks from climate change, industry officials say, with the floods in Australia and Brazil highlighting the potential losses from greater extremes of weather.

A boy touches an ice sculpture of a polar bear as it melts to reveal a bronze skeleton in Copenhagen December 8, 2009. (REUTERS/Bob Strong/Files)

Scientists say a warmer world will cause more intense drought, floods, cyclones as well as rising sea levels and the insurance industry says the number of weather-related disasters has already soared over the past several decades.

Adding to the risks is a growing human population, more people moving into cities, particularly in Asia, and more property in the path of increasingly volatile weather.

This makes it harder to tease out a direct climate change link in ever rising losses, experts say. Lack of long-term weather data in some parts of the world is also clouding the picture.

Another problem is the narrow time horizon insurers typically focus on. Reinsurers, for instance, renew their contracts annually based on past losses, meaning they aren't so concerned about trends decades in the future.

"There is still a fair amount of uncertainly as to climate change and the attribution of climate change to natural events or man-made and therefore it has not translated yet into the pricing," Yves Guerard, secretary-general of the Ottawa-based International Actuarial Association, told Reuters.

Some insurers are seeing a climate change link and rising risks.

"Ignoring global warming will risk an increasing exposure and therefore insured losses will escalate," said Scott Ryrie, CEO of Allianz SE Reinsurance Asia-Pacific in Singapore.

"I believe climate change will add something to the losses we see already but I don't believe losses will be dramatically changing. It's just going to make the losses worse," he told a climate change and insurance conference in Singapore.

Rapidly growing megacities were a major concern for the market, he said, pointing to UN data showing 231 million people living in cities in Asia in 1950. By 2050, that figure is forecast to grow to nearly 3.5 billion.

"Increased exposures with megacities coming up, low insurance penetration and key exposures being in emerging markets where most of the insurance growth has been happening. That's a time bomb," said Jan Mumenthaler, head of the International Finance Corporation's insurance services group.

CHANGES

In Australia, rising coastal urbanisation and a rapidly expanding mining sector means a growing risk of weather-related insurance losses. The government has said the floods since last month are expected to be the nation's costliest natural disaster, with damage and reconstruction estimates between $5 billion and $20 billion.

"In some regions of the world, we have already seen changes in the patterns in terms of frequency and intensity of these events," said Ernst Rauch of global reinsurer Munich Re.

He pointed to changes in rainfall patterns and more intense thunderstorms, hailstorms and tornados. "The U.S. is a prime example but also parts of Europe," he told Reuters in Singapore.

"But you cannot generalise and say that the weather patterns have changed already in all parts of the world in the same way. There is no evidence for this," said Rauch, head of the firm's Corporate Climate Centre.

Munich Re says the number of weather-related natural catastrophes has more than doubled since 1980.

Overall losses from weather-related natural catastrophes rose by a factor of 3 in the period 1980-2009, taking inflation into account, while insured losses from such events increased by a factor of about 4 during the same period. Total insured losses from natural disasters in 2010 was $37 billion, it says.

While taking into account rising wealth, population and urbanisation, "there is evidence indicating that the growing number of weather-related catastrophes most probably cannot be fully explained without climate change," the company says.

Rauch said the industry was struggling to get an accurate picture of the extent of climate change risks.

"It is not easy. And quite frankly, it would help if more companies in our industry would have more expertise and experts analysing these risks," he said.

Insurers use complex models to calculate catastrophe risks, but here, too, there were challenges.

"There's a huge amount of variability in the models and understanding that variability is hugely key," said David Simmons, managing director, analytics, of the Willis Group, a global insurance broker.

"And climate change adds another layer on to that. And so it's very hard. There's a fundamental lack of data," he said, pointing to lack of long-term global weather data.

"So trying to dis-engage natural climate variablity -- there are cyclical changes like El Nino and La Nina -- and then any underlying thing, is tough. But we are getting better at it," he told Reuters at the conference.

(Editing by Ed Lane)

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UK plans radical rethink of media regulation

Posted: 19 Jan 2011 06:25 AM PST

OXFORD, England (Reuters) - Britain's culture minister gave a glimmer of hope to the country's recovering media sector on Wednesday, saying he was willing to radically rethink and redesign the system of regulation.

Jeremy Hunt told the Oxford Media Convention in a speech he would conduct a thorough review before producing a Green Paper by the end of the year that will set the scope for a new Communications Act due in 2015.

"I am prepared to radically rethink the way we do things," he said. "To take a fresh look at what we regulate, whether we regulate and how we regulate. To consider whether there are areas we might move out of regulation altogether.

"This is not about tweaking the current system, but redesigning it -- from scratch if necessary -- to make it fit for purpose."

Hunt has already signaled that he would be willing to reduce the laws surrounding cross-media ownership at a local level and also the rules imposed on ITV, the country's biggest commercial free-to-air broadcaster, and how it charges for advertising.

One of the biggest issues facing the government at the moment is whether to refer to the Competition Commission the proposed bid by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp for the rest of the pay-TV group BSkyB it does not already own.

Hunt has said he will make a decision on whether to send the merger for a six-month examination by the end of this month, and said again on Wednesday he would not comment on the ongoing process.

"We are strictly following due process," he said. "It would be completely nuts for any secretary of state in my position not to follow due process for a decision that is as much in the public eye as that."

Hunt also asked media groups to state their interest in contributing towards a local media TV channel, which would sit alongside other public service broadcasters to offer a new voice for local communities.

Hunt asked all potential providers to register their interest by March 1.

"Our goal is to be able to award the relevant licenses by the end of 2012 and for local TV to be up and running soon after," he said.

(Reporting by Kate Holton; Editing by Jon Loades-Carter)

Copyright © 2011 Reuters

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