Aon’s June Catastrophe Report Outlines $500M Insured Losses After U.S. Storms

July 10, 2015

China’s monsoon losses approached $4 billion and the U.S. sustained nearly $500M in insured losses as a result of severe storms in June, according to Impact Forecasting’s latest edition of its monthly Global Catastrophe Recap report.

The report evaluates the impact of the natural disaster events that occurred worldwide during June 2015.

The report reveals that seasonal monsoon rains led to widespread flood and landslide damage across Asia during the month, including in China, where at least 50 people were killed and 100,000 homes damaged or destroyed. According to the Ministry of Civil Affairs, total aggregate economic losses reached almost $4 billion.

Elsewhere, areas of South Asia and Africa were impacted by monsoon-triggered floods that resulted in more than 140 fatalities in Bangladesh, India, Myanmar, Nepal, and Côte d’Ivoire. New Zealand’s North Island was also inundated, with one particular event causing estimated economic losses in excess of NZD120 million (US $82 million). Early data from the New Zealand Insurance Council cited more than 2,000 filed claims.

Further key natural peril events that occurred during June included:

  • Five separate outbreaks of severe weather and flooding impacted the United States, with powerful straight-line winds, large hail, flash floods, and isolated tornado touchdowns prompted damages throughout the Rockies, Plains, Midwest, Northeast, and Southeast. Aggregate June economic losses were anticipated to be well in excess of $1.0 billion, with preliminary insurance losses estimated at above $500 million.
  • A severe weather outbreak in northern China in mid-June caused significant damage to crops and property. Economic losses of CNY900 million (US $145 million) were reported.
  • Heatwave conditions in Pakistan claimed more than 1,240 lives as temperatures soared during the second half of the month, with the majority of the fatalities occurring in Karachi.
  • Western Europe endured record heat, with the highest temperatures reported in parts of the UK, Iberia and France.
  • Dozens of wildfires broke out across western parts of the U.S. with the most significant damage occurring in the state of Washington. Total economic losses were minimally estimated at $100 million, while wildfires elsewhere in the U.S. cost local agencies more than $50 million to fight.
  • A USGS-registered magnitude-6.0 earthquake struck eastern Malaysia on June 5, triggering rockslides on Mount Kinabalu that killed at least 19 people. Several properties were damaged and utility supplies were disrupted in some areas.

Source: Aon

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