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RMS Estimates Up To $1.5 Bn Insured Loss From Hurricane
Dean
Newark, Calif. – August 21, 2007 – Insured
losses from Hurricane Dean, which today made landfall in the Yucatan
Peninsula of Mexico, are likely to range between just US$ 0.75 billion
and $1.5 billion, according to latest estimates by Risk Management
Solutions, the world’s leading provider of products and services for
catastrophe risk management. Of this, only up to $300 million is
expected to be from damage to the Mexican coast, with most of the
remainder resulting from the storm’s destruction in Jamaica.
Hurricane Dean -the first category 5 storm since 2005, with wind speeds
of around 160 miles per hour - struck the south-eastern Yucatan
Peninsular coast in a sparsely populated area approximately 40 miles
north east of Chetumal. Had the storm tracked 150 miles north it would
have impacted the bustling tourist cities of Cancun and Cozumel,
tripling the insured loss in Mexico.
“Dean has taken an extraordinarily fortunate track, slipping between St
Lucia and Martinique and striking a scarcely populated area of the
Mexican coast. Given its intensity, the Caribbean and Winward Islands
have faired relatively well,” commented Dr Claire Souch, senior director
of model management at RMS. “Though Jamaica has taken a large hit, the
track for a category 5 storm could hardly have been better planned to
minimize the damage.”
She added: “Dean’s impact in Mexico will be similar to Hurricane Emily’s
in 2005, which was a category 4 storm and caused around $250 million of
insured loss. If Dean had made landfall in the north of the Yucatan
Peninsular coast, we could have been looking at a near repeat of
Hurricane Wilma, which devastated the area and resulted in insured
losses of some $1.8 billion.”
Dean has remained a fairly small storm since it originated from a
vigorous tropical wave that moved off Africa’s west coast on 11 August,
though it has intensified relatively quickly. As it travels across the
Yucatan Peninsula it will decrease in intensity, but will likely
maintain a category 1 to 2 hurricane status before emerging into the Bay
of Campeche. Here, it is not expected to cause much damage, despite
being where the majority of Mexico’s oil is extracted.
Forecasts suggest that it will not make landfall in the United States
and will instead continue on a westward route and make a final landfall
in a lowly populated region of Mexico on Wednesday night. Interaction
with land should cause the hurricane to decay rapidly to a tropical
storm.
RMS will continue to monitor the situation and will update its estimate
of insured losses as its analysis continues.
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