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RMS Announces Estimated Hurricane Activity Rates for
2008 to 2012 U.S. Hurricane Landfall Risk Expected
to Remain Significantly
Above the Long-Term Average
Newark, CA – November 20, 2007 – Risk
Management Solutions (RMS) has confirmed its modeled hurricane activity
rates for 2008 to 2012 following an elicitation with a group of the
world’s leading hurricane researchers. Results of the elicitation
suggest that the average risk of landfalling hurricanes in the Atlantic
Basin for the next five years – known as ‘the medium-term view’ –
remains at approximately the same level as has been predicted for the
past two years, which is significantly above the risk averaged over the
long term.
Therefore, medium-term hurricane activity rates in the 2008 version of
the RMS® U.S. Hurricane Model will remain unchanged from the existing
2007 version. The current activity rates lead to estimates of average
annual insured losses that will be 40% higher than those predicted by
the long-term mean of hurricane activity for the Gulf Coast, Florida,
and the Southeast, and 25-30% higher for the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast
coastal regions.
Seven experts from North America, Europe, and Asia participated in the
annual elicitation in Miami last month. This highly respected and
innovative approach to estimating hurricane landfall rates allowed
leading researchers to review a range of statistical models representing
alternative perspectives on potential hurricane activity in the
Atlantic, including the possibility for decreasing activity over the
next five years. The experts were then asked to weight the various
models to provide their best estimate of the landfalling hurricane risk
in the U.S. and Caribbean from 2008 to 2012.
“Although U.S. hurricane-related losses have been low since 2004 and
2005, it was apparent from the views expressed among the experts that we
are still in a period of elevated hurricane activity that started in
1995, and that this is likely to continue for at least several more
years,” commented Dr. Claire Souch, senior director of model management
at RMS. “However, there remains disagreement and uncertainty about what
is driving the change in hurricane frequency, with some researchers
believing it is mainly due to natural cycles in oceanic circulation, and
others arguing it is primarily caused by human-induced climate change.”
The 2007 hurricane season has seen 14 named storms, which is close to
the annual average of 14.7 since 1995. It is the first season ever
recorded in which 40% of hurricanes reached category 5 status, and the
only one in which two maximum strength storms struck land. The U.S.
coast was spared the potential devastation of hurricanes Dean and Felix
due to the fortunate coincidence of a high pressure system off Florida
that steered the storms south to sparsely populated areas of Mexico and
Nicaragua. Had this high-pressure system been in its typical position
farther north near Bermuda, the hurricanes may have taken a different
track, potentially causing catastrophic damage to the U.S.
Implications for Mitigation and the Insurance Regulatory Environment
Since 2005, RMS has conducted an annual review of Atlantic hurricane
activity rates to provide an independent and accurate view of risk
through a medium-term model, ensuring that insurers and their
policy-holders can understand, manage, and mitigate the risk
effectively. This year’s elicitation confirms the view that the
long-term historical average of hurricane activity does not distinguish
well between periods of higher and lower hurricane frequency and
significantly underestimates the current level of hurricane hazard along
the U.S. coast, leaving insurers and their policy-holders more exposed
than they believe.
The implications of this conclusion are particularly salient for the
State of Florida. Currently, the Florida Commission on Hurricane Loss
Projection Methodology (FCHLPM) must certify a catastrophe model for use
in homeowners ratemaking within the state of Florida based on a series
of complex data, actuarial, and meteorological standards. This
certification does not affect the general use of models for internal
risk modeling or reinsurance pricing, structuring, and purchasing, or
use in other states. However, we continue to believe that the standards
are not explicitly written to consider models that are based on
state-of-the-art techniques that extend beyond traditional risk modeling
methodologies based on the long-term average of historical activity.
Earlier in 2007, the version of the RMS model, which is based on the
long-term historical average of hurricane landfalls, was certified by
the FCHLPM (version 6.0a). The certification of this model does not
expire, and consequently RMS will not be submitting a new model to the
FCHLPM in 2008.
“We remain dedicated to engaging with the insurance industry, the
regulatory environment, and public policy officials to articulate the
risk facing the U.S. and to actively develop mitigation and response
measures to reduce the risk,” said Mitch Sattler, vice president of
public policy for RMS. “We support the ultimate goals of regulation and
will continue to pursue discussions with the FCHLPM and other regulatory
bodies to create standards that encourage modeling techniques aimed at
characterizing risk as accurately as possible.”
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