insurance costs
Newsletter
Credit: Tierra Mallorca/Unsplash
Climate change impacts insurance availability in high-risk areas
Increasing natural disasters driven by climate change are making insurance unaffordable or unavailable for many homeowners, especially in states like California, Florida, and Louisiana.
In short:
- Homeowners in high-risk areas struggle to find affordable insurance as companies withdraw or hike premiums.
- States offer insurers more flexibility, but risk becoming the insurers of last resort.
- Rising disaster costs and population growth in risky areas exacerbate the problem.
Key quote:
“Insurance companies have basically become our land-use officials.”
— Doug Heller, director of insurance with the Consumer Federation of America
Why this matters:
Without affordable insurance, homeowners may be forced to relocate, which could lead to broader economic and social impacts. The increasing financial strain on homeowners is just one of many symptoms of a planet under stress. For families, this isn't just about rising costs—it's about the stability and security of their homes and lives.
Keep reading...Show less
Newsletter
Republicans cough up cash to save Florida's insurance market
The state's insurance companies are struggling to survive an onslaught of hurricanes and litigation.
Newsletter
Insuring extreme weather disasters: Losing money to climate change
Insurers are paying more for extreme weather while continuing to finance and underwrite activities that warp the climate. Climate activists are pushing them to stop.
www.vice.com
Toronto councillor wants to sue big oil for climate change costs
Mike Layton wants Toronto to put an exact price tag on how much climate change will cost everyone in the city.
ORIGINAL REPORTING
MOST POPULAR
CLIMATE