Weather catastrophes drive majority of $225 billion economic cost of natural perils in 2018 – Aon catastrophe report
Global insured losses led by major tropical cyclone and wildfire events
Aon plc, a leading global professional services firm providing a broad range of risk, retirement and health solutions, today launches its Weather, Climate & Catastrophe Insight: 2018 Annual Report. This evaluates the impact of global natural disaster events to identify trends, manage volatility and enhance resilience.
The report reveals that 394 natural catastrophe events in 2018 generated economic losses of USD 225 billion. Of that total, private sector and government-sponsored insurance programs covered USD 90 billion of the total – the fourth-highest year on record. This means the protection gap, which is the portion of economic losses not covered by insurance, was 60 percent and at its lowest level since 2005.
The biggest driver of catastrophes in 2018 was the tropical cyclone peril following several significant landfalling storms. This included Hurricane Michael and Hurricane Florence (United States), Typhoon Jebi and Typhoon Trami (Japan), Typhoon Mangkhut (Philippines, Hong Kong, China), and Typhoon Rumbia (China). As a result, 2017 and 2018 resulted in the costliest back-to-back years on record for both economic losses (USD 653 billion) solely due to weather-related events, and for insured losses across all perils (USD 237 billion).
Andy Marcell, CEO of Aon's Reinsurance Solutions business, commented: "2018 was another active year for global natural disasters. While there was not a singular 'mega' catastrophe event, there were 42 billion-dollar events which aggregated to a slightly above-average year. The re/insurance industry continues to withstand the payouts backed up with USD 595 billion of capital but focus on managing the cost of changing climate and weather events by helping to close the protection gap."
Additional major events during the year included a series of major wildfires in Northern and Southern California. The costliest insured loss event of 2018 was the Camp Fire at USD 12 billion, which also became California's deadliest and most destructive fire on record.
Steve Bowen, Director and Meteorologist at Aon's Impact Forecasting team, commented: "Among the takeaways from the events of 2018 was the recognition that catastrophe risk continues to evolve. The complex combination of socioeconomics, shifts in population and exposure into vulnerable locations, plus a changing climate contributing to more volatile weather patterns, is forcing new conversations to sufficiently handle the need for mitigation and resilience measures. Natural disasters are always going to occur. How well we prepare can and will play a key role in future event losses."
Other significant regional events during the year included:
- October's Camp Fire in the US destroyed 18,804 structures, including most of the city of Paradise. Total economic costs were estimated to approach USD 15 billion. Overall insured losses from wildfires in California set a new record for the second year in a row.
- In Japan, torrential rains during the month of July led to catastrophic flooding across much of the country with total damage nearing USD 10 billion.
- A multi-billion-dollar flood occurred in India's state of Kerala during the seasonal summer monsoon months.
- Much of Northern and Central Europe endured prolonged summer drought conditions as aggregate costs, mostly to agriculture, which tallied to near USD 9 billion. Multi-billion-dollar drought events also impacted the United States, Argentina, China, and India.
- A significant stretch of severe weather and flooding impacted Italy and Austria during October and November, as the economic toll topped USD 5 billion.
- Reaching USD 2.1 billion of insured losses, Windstorm Friederike was the fifth-costliest European windstorm of the 21st century.
Watch meteorologist and report author Steve Bowen's short film on the key findings of the study, plus discover further insights on the interactive microsite.
Access current and historical natural catastrophe data, plus event analysis, on Impact Forecasting's Catastrophe Insight website.