Strengthening insurance partnerships in the face of climate change - Insights from an agent-based model of flood insurance in the UK
Authored by S Surminski, Katie Jenkins, Florence Crick
Date Published: 2018
DOI: 10.1016/j.scitotenv.2018.04.239
Sponsors:
European Union
United Kingdom Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC)
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
Other Narrative
Flow charts
Model Code URLs:
https://www.comses.net/codebases/4647/releases/1.2.0/
Abstract
Multisectoral partnerships are increasingly cited as a mechanism to
deliver and improve disaster risk management. Yet, partnerships are not
a panacea and more research is required to understand the role that they
can play in disaster risk management and particularly disaster risk
reduction. This paper investigates how partnerships can incentivise
flood risk reduction by focusing on the UK public-private partnership on
flood insurance. Developing the right flood insurance arrangements to
incentivise flood risk reduction and adaptation to climate change is a
key challenge. In the face of rising flood risks due to climate change
and socio-economic development insurance partnerships can no longer
afford to focus only on the risk transfer function. However, while
expectations of the insurance industry have traditionally been high when
it comes to flood risk management, the insurance industry alone will not
provide the solution to the challenge of rising risks. The case of flood
insurance in the UK illustrates this: even national government and
industry together cannot fully address these risks and other actors need
to be involved to create strong incentives for risk reduction. Using an
agent-based model focused on surface water flood risk in London we
analyse how other partners could strengthen the insurance partnership by
reducing flood risk and thus helping to maintain affordable insurance
premiums. Our findings are relevant for wider discussions on the
potential of insurance schemes to incentivise flood risk management and
climate adaptation in the UK and also internationally. (C) 2018 The
Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V.
Tags
Climate change
Management
Risk
partnerships
Strategies
Insurance
Surface water flood risk