Property insurers update risk modelling as Canada braces for climate impacts
VANCOUVER — The estimated $78 million in insured property damage from the wildfire that devastated the community of Lytton, B.C., in June is a fraction of the rising costs of disasters fuelled by climate change, the Insurance Bureau of Canada says.
The average annual cost of claims for property damage or losses due to severe weather has more than quadrupled over the last decade to about $2 billion, said Craig Stewart, the bureau’s vice-president of federal affairs.
That’s up from about $400 million each year between 2000 and 2009, around the time insurers began to see increases in property claims, he said in an interview.
The climate crisis is fuelling “more frequent, but also more severe weather events,” Stewart said, pointing to flooding across Eastern Canada in recent years, higher-intensity tornadoes and dangerous wildfires on a nearly seasonal basis.