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For some US residents, it is now impossible to
get home insurance - and all because of the climate crisis
Arwa
Mahdawi
The rising incidence of wildfires means many
Californians can no longer insure their property. It’s a sign of what’s ahead
for the whole housing market
Wed 31 May
2023 07.00 BST
Insurance
company documents aren’t exactly renowned for being riveting reading. This
week, however, State Farm, the largest insurance firm in the US by premium volume,
came out with an eyeball-grabbing update: it has stopped accepting new
homeowner insurance applications in California.
In a
statement, the company said the decision was based on the heightened risk of
natural disasters, such as wildfires, along with historic increases in
construction costs.
This news
didn’t come out of nowhere. Last year, two large insurance firms in California
ended their coverage for some multimillion-dollar houses in wildfire-prone
areas. “We cannot charge an adequate price for the risk,” one insurance company
CEO explained in an earnings call. But the scope of this announcement seems
unprecedented. The US’s biggest insurer halting new policies in the US’s most
populous state? A state with a population of nearly 40 million suddenly having
its home insurance options curtailed because insurance companies know that
extreme weather is only getting worse and more expensive? If this doesn’t serve
as a wake-up call about the climate crisis, I don’t know what will. Melting ice
caps may be abstract enough to ignore, but plummeting house prices have a way
of getting people’s attention.
House
prices haven’t plummeted yet, of course. Quite the opposite: California is an
incredibly expensive place to live. But if you can’t get insurance, it’s almost
impossible to get a mortgage. This makes it harder to sell your house and will
make prices go down. The writing is on the wall, as insurance companies are
well aware.
Arwa Mahdawi is a Guardian columnist
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