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RMS Estimates $6 To $8 Billion Insured Losses
from Hurricane Charley
Newark, Calif. – August 17, 2004 – Catastrophe
modeling firm Risk Management Solutions (RMS) has estimated insured
losses from Hurricane Charley at $6 to $8 billion based on a detailed
reconstruction of the storm’s windfield and damage pattern. RMS
engineers have been surveying damage since Saturday, and have verified
the storm’s unusually narrow swath of intense damage. The teams have
also been validating the exact position of this damage relative to the
highest concentrations of insured property in the landfall zone and in
the Orlando metropolitan area. This analysis has led to an increase in
insured loss estimates relative to the company’s preliminary estimate of
approximately $5 billion, issued on Friday evening as Charley was
exiting Florida’s east coast. Updated losses include a small
contribution from the storm’s second landfall in the Carolinas.
The RMS reconnaissance team surveying the landfall
area confirmed the highest levels of damage from just south of Fort
Myers northward to Port Charlotte. Offshore barrier islands that took
the brunt of the storm’s wind and surge, including Sanibel Island, were
still inaccessible. These areas have undergone rapid development in
recent years, increasing the amount of insured exposure.
“Damage patterns are very consistent with our windfield reconstruction,”
commented Michael Young, chief wind vulnerability engineer at RMS.
“There is widespread severe damage to mobile homes and light metal
buildings throughout the landfall area. We also see severe roof damage
to residences, as expected from Category 4 winds.”
The damage path extends inland along U.S. Highway 17
past the town of Arcadia in DeSoto County, where the team also observed
heavy damage. In the core of the wind swath near Arcadia, a number of
steel frame structures including the Turner Civic Center sustained major
damage consistent with Category 3 winds, as modeled in the RMS
windfield.
A second reconnaissance team in Orlando confirmed the
position and intensity of winds as the storm penetrated far inland.
Charley moved very quickly across the state, allowing it to maintain
strong Category 1 to Category 2 force winds on its approach to the
densely populated Orlando metropolitan area.
“The damage is quite heavy if you consider how far inland we are from
the landfall point,” said Phil LeGrone, RMS vulnerability engineer in
charge of the Orlando reconnaissance. “The most intense damage occurred
in southern parts of the metropolitan area, along a corridor about 10
miles wide between Interstate 4 and the Orlando International Airport.
The amount of development in the Orlando area makes it an important
component of the total loss in the state.”
The $6 to $8 billion loss estimate includes expected
insurance payments for damage to residential and commercial structures,
contents, autos, and loss of use (business interruption and additional
living expenses). These insured loss estimates do not include other
components of total economic loss such as uninsured property,
infrastructure damage, agricultural losses, losses below insurance
deductibles, or flood losses paid through the National Flood Insurance
Program. The estimates also do not include losses incurred in the
Caribbean, where the storm crossed the Cayman Islands as a Category 1
hurricane prior to moving across Cuba and into Florida.
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