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RMS Makes Commitment to Studying the Impacts and
Implications of Climate Change
Appoints Climate Change Scientist Dedicated to
Vital Area of Research
Newark, Calif. – February 1, 2007 – Risk
Management Solutions (RMS), the world’s leading provider of products and
services for the management of catastrophe risk, has announced the
appointment of Dr. Celine Herweijer to the position of Principal
Scientist, Future Climate. The role reflects a commitment by the company
to explore the evaluation of future climate risk for today’s economic,
business, and political decisions. Dr. Celine Herweijer is a climate
scientist, recognized for her work on modeling drought and the impact of
oceans on climate. In her new role, Dr. Herweijer will lead RMS work
around the wide-ranging implications of future climate risk.
“Just as RMS has pioneered the neutral science-based
quantitative perspective on catastrophe risk, we intend to lead the
assessment of future risk, both to motivate effective adaptation as well
as to provide an independent informed view of what lies ahead,” said
Hemant Shah, president and CEO of RMS.
Based on accumulating evidence, there is a resounding
consensus among scientists that the Earth’s climate is changing in
response to increases in greenhouse gas emissions from human activities.
The global warming trend has accelerated since the 1970s, and 11 of the
last 12 years have ranked in the top twelve warmest years since 1850. A
warming climate leads to changes in the nature and occurrence of
extremes – tropical and temperate windstorms, droughts, heatwaves, and
wildfires, as well as floods of all kinds – and for some regions and
perils, RMS expects increases in the severity and/or frequency of
catastrophic events. RMS climate modelers are already investigating
where and how such impacts should be incorporated in catastrophe models
that assess current risk, and how to model changes in risk into the
future.
“For many regions and perils, hazard of the past is
different from the hazard of today, which is in turn different from the
hazard of the future,” said Dr. Robert Muir-Wood, chief research officer
at RMS. “Society is still coming to terms with the profound implications
of this – in addition to concerns for the safety and welfare of
residents of vulnerable communities, future risk and future value is
already beginning to impact today’s economic and political decisions,
from investment in a ski resort, to development in a canal estate in the
Caribbean.”
As the global market leader in the objective analysis
of new and emerging risks, RMS is making a commitment to policy-makers
and business to help them understand both how climate change will affect
the risks of catastrophes, and the economic implications of how society
can best manage these risks.
“Our examination of future climate risk is an
important development that will help us to meet the needs of business
and society,” said Dr. Herweijer. “We have reached the stage where the
economics of the consequences of climate change is going to become a
principal motivation for taking action.”
In the next twelve months RMS will pursue initiatives
to enhance catastrophe modeling to explore the potential costs of future
climate risk, and undertake focused case studies to assess the economic
implications of climate change for communities and for business, in both
the developing and the developed world. In addition, RMS will continue
to engage worldwide business and government leaders in a discussion of
the challenges posed by future climate risks, and in the identification
of opportunities to react proactively today, for tomorrow’s risks.
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