Verisk expects insured losses to onshore property from Hurricane Ian to range between $42 billion and $57 billion. Verisk Extreme Event Solutions’ industry loss estimate includes estimated wind, storm surge, and inland flood losses from Ian’s landfalls in both Florida and South Carolina. Certain elements, such as losses to the National Flood Insurance Program and any potential impacts of litigation or social inflation, could cause the total insured industry loss to exceed USD 60 billion, according to the loss estimate.
The majority of the loss estimate is made up of wind damage ranging from $38 to 51 billion. Storm surge (excluding NFIP losses) accounts for $3 to 5.5 billion of the loss estimate, with inland flooding accounting for less than $1 billion. The effects of Ian’s South Carolina landfall will account for approximately 1% of total industry loss.
A summary of the damage
Wind damage was observed to varying degrees in all areas impacted by Hurricane Ian’s windfield. Damage was more severe in and around the areas of southwest Florida where Ian made landfall. It ranged from significant roof cover loss in residential homes to torn commercial roof membranes. There is also extensive damage to building components and cladding.
Storm surge also wreaked havoc on communities along Florida’s western coast, where Ian made landfall. Residential construction in these areas is mostly based on slabs, which do not provide much elevation above the local ground surface. The collapse of several rows of beachfront residential homes was caused by surge damage. Homes were dislodged from their foundations in some cases.
When Ian made landfall in southwest Florida, manufactured homes made up a sizable portion of the residential inventory. Several manufactured home parks in these areas suffered extensive damage, including roof loss, wall siding damage, and near total destruction.
What’s included in Verisk’s estimate
Included in the estimate are losses to onshore residential, commercial, and industrial properties and automobiles for their building, contents, and time element coverage. The estimate reflects the impacts of inflation on labor and materials over the past two years, as well as the effects of demand surge, when large numbers of property owners look to rebuild at the same time.
Verisk’s modeled insured loss estimates do not include:
- Losses paid out by the National Flood Insurance Program
- Losses exacerbated by litigation, fraudulent assignment of benefits, or social inflation
- Loss adjustment expenses
- Losses to inland marine, ocean-going marine cargo and hull, and pleasure boats
- Storm surge leakage losses paid on wind-only policies due to government intervention
- Losses to uninsured properties
- Losses to infrastructure
- Losses from extra-contractual obligations
- Losses from hazardous waste cleanup, vandalism, or civil commotion, whether directly or indirectly caused by the event
- Losses resulting from the compromise of existing defenses (e.g., natural and man-made levees)
- Other non-modeled losses, including those resulting from tornadoes spawned by the storm
- Losses for U.S. offshore assets and non-U.S. property
How the hurricane unfolded and broke records
Heavy rain, storm surge, and tropical storm conditions began across portions of southwest Florida late Tuesday afternoon. Overnight Ian slid past the Florida Keys. Despite receiving a glancing blow from Ian, Key West recorded its third-highest storm surge since 1913 at just over 3 feet and peak wind gusts into the upper-60s mph.
Conditions deteriorated rapidly in western Florida as Wednesday morning progressed, with heavy rainfall spreading northward and major-hurricane-force winds from Ian’s eyewall coming onshore late morning near Fort Myers Beach and Sanibel Island. To the south, in Naples and surrounding areas, Ian’s powerful winds were oriented perpendicular to the coast, which exacerbated the water inundation caused by storm surge as water from the Gulf was effectively blown inland. As a result, Naples saw over 6 feet of catastrophic storm surge, shattering the previous record.
Ian officially made landfall at Cayo Costa, Florida at 3:05 PM local time as a Category 4 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 150 mph. Around this time, a 124-mph wind gust was observed in Punta Gorda before the station failed. Ian then slowly proceeded inland, following a northeasterly track that led the storm’s massive 30-mile-wide eye (wider than the east-west extent of Lake Okeechobee) over Gasparilla Sound and Punta Gorda.
Owing to the storm’s slow motion, areas like Port Charlotte and Englewood remained in Ian’s eyewall for several hours; this resulted in 18 – 20 inches of rainfall in addition to prolonged exposure to the powerful wind gusts located in Ian’s northwestern eyewall. Ian managed to stay about 65 miles southwest of Tampa, which owing to Ian’s large wind field was still close enough to bring wind gusts into the upper-70s mph and 2 – 5 inches of rainfall; before that, Tampa Bay was temporarily drained of water because of inverse storm surge from Ian.
On Thursday morning, Ian moved off the Atlantic coast near Cape Canaveral – a bit further south than previously expected. As Ian moved back over the ocean on Thursday, conditions were favorable enough for some additional strengthening and Ian was upgraded to a hurricane as of Thursday evening.
Ian made a second landfall on Friday afternoon at 2:05 pm EDT near Georgetown, SC as a mid-range Category 1 hurricane with maximum sustained winds of 85 mph. Heavy rainfall and strong gusty winds of more than 50 mph impacted portions of the Carolinas. With these impacts ongoing, Ian was officially declared post-tropical at 5pm as the center moved into northeast South Carolina.
Hurricane Ian brought significant storm surge damage to southwest Florida, to both residential and commercial exposures. However, the flood insurance take-up on residential risks in Florida are low.
About Extreme Event Solutions at Verisk
Extreme event solutions at Verisk provides risk modeling solutions that help individuals, businesses, and society become more resilient to extreme events. In 1987, Verisk founded the catastrophe modeling industry and today models the risk from natural catastrophes, supply chain disruptions, terrorism, pandemics, and casualty catastrophes. Insurance, reinsurance, financial, corporate, and government clients rely on Verisk’s advanced science, software, and consulting services for catastrophe risk management, insurance-linked securities, longevity modeling, site-specific engineering analyses, and agricultural risk management. Verisk’s extreme event solutions team is headquartered in Boston, with additional offices in North America, Europe, and Asia. For more information, please visit www.air-worldwide.com. For more information about Verisk, a leading data analytics provider serving customers in insurance, energy and specialized markets, and financial services, please visit www.verisk.com.