TX Property Insurance Rates Up 22% In 2023; Most Billion-Dollar TX Disasters Ever Took Place In 2023
Yes, they're connected.
Insurance companies across Texas have dramatically increased home insurance rates this year, state filings show, as climate change spooks executives and inflation pushes up costs to rebuild after natural disasters. Texas is prone to hurricanes and flooding, both of which are made more severe by climate change. Now insurance companies are becoming increasingly concerned about more powerful thunderstorms that are wrecking homes with flooding, hail and strong winds, analysts and experts said.
And as both the impacts of climate change and inflation have worsened over the last couple of years, insurers have less of an appetite for taking chances in catastrophe-prone states, said Tim Zawacki, an insurance industry principal research analyst for S&P Global. The impacts are being felt on homeowners pocketbooks: Insurance rates in Texas have skyrocketed 22% since the beginning of this year according to an S&P Global analysis of Texas Department of Insurance data.
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There have already been 16 disasters in Texas this year that cost $1 billion or more a new state high for billion-dollar disasters in a single year, according to National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration inflation-adjusted data. And thats during a year when no hurricanes struck the Texas coast: Almost all of those weather disasters were severe storms. Over the last two years, Zawacki said, property losses from convective storms, which includes thunderstorms, tornadoes, hail, and heavy rains, have dramatically increased. While climate change may be a political issue, Zawacki said, I dont think companies and their shareholders are willing to take the bet that its a transitory situation.
Climate scientists have observed that thunderstorms with heavy rains are now more frequent in the U.S. and longer lasting than they used to be, and the storm conditions that produce large hail are more common, according to the Fifth National Climate Assessment. Texas emits more greenhouse gas emissions than any other state, according to the Environmental Protection Agency. It accounts for 14% of the nations climate-warming emissions, and produces more than twice the total emissions of California, the next largest greenhouse gas emitter. Texas is also the nations largest oil and gas producing state, accounting for more than 40% of the nations oil production.
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