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Association of British Insurers Uses RMS Model as
Basis for New U.K. Flood Recommendations
New ABI Study Analyzes the Effects of Rising Sea
Levels on Flood Risk
in Eastern England
Newark, Calif. – November 9, 2006 –
Risk Management Solutions (RMS), the world’s leading provider of
products and services for the management of catastrophe risk, today
announced that the Association of British Insurers (ABI) has
released new findings and recommendations on managing flood risk on
the east coast of England, based on RMS analyses and modeling.
The study used the RMS U.K. storm surge catastrophe model to examine
the current and future impacts of coastal flooding along the east
coast of England, focused on five case study areas:
Kingston-upon-Hull, Great Yarmouth and Lowestoft, Canvey Island and
Southend, East London, and Hastings.
For this study, three storm surge scenarios were identified from the
many hundreds of events in the RMS stochastic model representing
surges with a 200-250 year return period for different sections of
the coastline. One of the three was a close match to the surge that
caused the great flood of January 31/February 1, 1953 when more than
2,000 people were drowned in eastern England and the Netherlands.
More than 100 simulations were run for each surge, to sample the
full range of surge outcomes, from storms arriving at low tide with
well-performing flood defenses, to storms arriving at high tide with
poorly-performing flood defenses. RMS also increased the mean sea
levels by 0.1, 0.2, and 0.4 meters at all reference locations in
order to assess the effects of the anticipated rise in sea levels.
The exposures and vulnerabilities employed in the simulations were
those of the standard RMS model.
The RMS analysis led to several major conclusions, including:
• Assuming today’s building exposure remains constant, the number of
properties at risk of flooding in eastern England rises from 270,000 to 404,000 if there is a future
0.4-meter rise in sea levels. However, investment now in
improvements to coastal flood defenses could reduce the number of
properties at risk from 270,000 to 170,000; a 0.4-meter rise in sea
levels would then increase this to 287,400 properties, roughly the
same as today.
• Assuming current level of flood defenses are not improved, the
financial cost of one of the ‘1953 type’ storm surge scenarios would
rise by around 150% to between £7.5 billion and £16 billion (for
current exposure and values) with a sea level rise of 0.4 meters.
The ABI study showed that maintaining levels of risk comparable with
those today would cost £3.7-4.6 billion in improving defenses and
flood risk management.
“The recent publication of the Stern report on the Economics of
Climate Change has shown how the costs of future risk need to inform
today’s economic decisions,” said Dr. Robert Muir-Wood, Chief
Research Officer at RMS. “Catastrophe models are the appropriate
tools for exploring the costs of some of the key risks of Climate
Change, in particular in the coastal zone, so as to identify and
optimize alternative paths of adaptation.”
The ABI has put
forward several recommendations to the British government based on the
recent study, including increased spending on coastal flood defenses and
in the Thames estuary as well as changes in regional planning guidelines
to account for long-term flood risk. ABI's website can be accessed at www.abi.org.uk
About ABI
The Association of British Insurers is the trade association
representing insurers writing 94% of the domestic insurance business
in the United Kingdom, the world's third largest insurance market.
The ABI has been active in investigating climate change issues for
over a decade, including research published in June 2005 on the
likely costs of damage arising from hurricanes in the US, typhoons
in Japan and winter windstorm in Europe, following climate change.
The ABI's objective is to ensure public policy decisions enable
customers and communities to continue to prosper through appropriate
risk management, including measures to mitigate further climate
change and to adapt to the already inevitable climate change over
the next several decades.
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