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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CLIMATE CHANGE STUDY SAN FRANCISCO (June 2, 2008) — The National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) today adopted a new white paper, The Potential Impacts of Climate Change on Insurance Regulation. It documents the potential insurance-related impacts of climate change on insurance consumers, insurers and insurance regulators. “Nearly anything that is insured — property, crops and livestock, business operations or human life and health — is vulnerable to weather-related events,” said NAIC President and Kansas Insurance Commissioner Sandy Praeger. “State insurance regulators are aggressively moving forward to influence greater industry attention and action relative to climate change-related risk.” The white paper thoroughly examines climate change and the corresponding issues faced by insurance regulators, including:
“Climate change is a complex issue — and this white paper merely serves as the beginning of a process, rather than the end,” Praeger said. “The growing consensus about climate change requires responsible business decisions to address the issue.” Specifically, the white paper recommends that state insurance regulators develop standardized climate risk dislosures that answer the following questions:
“The disclosure proposal is a minimum first step toward obtaining the information regulators need to determine the impact climate change will have on insurance consumers,” Praeger added. Click HERE for more information about the NAIC Climate Change and Global Warming Task Force.
About the NAIC Formed in 1871, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) is a voluntary organization of the chief insurance regulatory officials of the 50 states, the District of Columbia and five U.S. territories. The NAIC has three offices: Executive Office, Washington, D.C.; Central Office, Kansas City, Mo.; and Securities Valuation Office, New York City.
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©2008 National Association of Insurance Commissioners. All rights reserved. | ||