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Climate Change and the Insurance Industry A Critical look at the Ceres report: Availability and Affordability of Insurance Und

October 27, 2005

Source

The Center for Science and Public Policy

Author

A recently released report by Ceres (self-described as a national coalition of investors, environmental organizations, and other public interest groups working with companies to address sustainability challenges such as climate change) suggests that the impacts of climate change to events such as floods, windstorms, thunderstorms, hail storms, ice storms, wildfires, droughts, and heat waves are already being felt in the United States and that their impacts will grow into the future as human activities continue to affect the atmospheric composition. However, the Ceres report derived from a paper by Mills published in Science magazine (Mills, E., 2005. Insurance in a Climate of Change. Science, 308, 1040- 1044. August 12, 2005), - fails to make its case in a scientifically defensible manner. Its analyses are inadequate and ill-formed, and it ignores a large, robust body of literature on the subject whose conclusions run opposite to those found in the Ceres report.

 

In this analysis, we provide a basic overview of the issue pointing out the primary scientific weaknesses underlying the conclusions in the Ceres report. In addition, we also include an extensive annotated bibliography containing summaries of major scientific reviews and findings that conclude that changes in extreme weather events are not the primary factors behind the observed increases in weather-related economic losses. This bibliography includes broad overviews, as well as papers on specific extreme weather-event types. By and large, the conclusions of these papers were not included, considered, or discussed in the Ceres report--a clear indication of the inadequacies and biases inherent in the Ceres report. Thus, the Ceres report does not fairly represent the state of knowledge on the topic of climate change and its effect on the insurance industry, and as such, should not be relied upon in decision-making processes.

 

Download the complete document (PDF) here.

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With all these people

With all these people frantically scurrying about trying to prevent global warming, there are two critically important points that they are missing: 1) Global Warming is a process that occurs naturally, and will happen whether we try to stop it or not, and 2) as for human CO2 production, 1 volcano spews out, in one eruption, more of it than we've produced in most of human history. I believe if everyone would just sit down and face the facts instead of listening to all the garbage the media is spewing out, they'd stop with all this scurrying, which is making the situation worse, not better

Now that you mentioned about

Now that you mentioned about this, I realize that climate change can have a huge influence over the insurance industry, people are getting more worried about all things that can bring risk for their lives and for the environment. I have noticed that the latest trends register an important growth in life insurance policies.
No medical term life Insurance