CCR issues report on natural catastrophe costs up to 2050

Caisse Centrale de Réassurance CCRThe Caisse Centrale de Réassurance (CCR) has published a report analysing the impact of climate change on the cost of natural catastrophes up to 2050.

The study addresses the consequences of global warming, and focuses on three main risks covered by the Nat Cat regime (flooding due to overflow and runoff, coastal flooding and geotechnical drought*).

PerilIncrease in average annual cost
(Hazard)
Annual trend
up to 2050
Flooding148 million EUR (160.7 million USD)15%
Coastal flooding58 million EUR (63 million USD)85%
Geotechnical drought606 million EUR (658 million USD)83%

PerilIncrease in average annual cost
(Hazard + trends in insured risks **)
Annual trend
up to 2050
Flooding370 million EUR (401.8 million USD)38%
Coastal flooding76 million EUR (82.5 million USD)112%
Geotechnical drought747 million EUR (811.2 million USD)103%

By way of reminder, geotechnical drought is the most expensive risk in 2022, costing 3.5 billion EUR (3.7 billion USD). Initial estimates put the cost of this hazard at 900 million EUR (977.4 million USD) for 2023.

* Geotechnical drought: also known as clay shrinkage-swelling hazard (RGA), which causes damage to buildings and structures.

** Trends in insured risks: this refers to the increase in the cost of claims due to population growth and urban density.

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