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322 L.Schäfer et al.
works by pooling losses, transferring risk of fortuitous losses and indemnification
(Rejda andMcNamara 2017). By spreading risks among people and over space
and time, insurance-related tools allow to collectively manage losses that would
overwhelm individualmembers of a group, limiting the need formembers to take
costly individual action. In this arrangement, the premium replaces the “uncertain
prospect of losseswith the certainty ofmaking small, regular premiumpayments”
(Churchill 2006). In case of a loss which is covered by the insurance policy, the
insuredholds the right toclaimcompensation.
Basedontheseprinciples,disasterriskinsuranceisafacilitativemechanismwhich
provides post-disaster financial support against the loss of assets, livelihoods, and
lives at an individual, community, national, and regional level. “Climate risk insur-
ance” refers to a special type of disaster insurance, covering losses and damages
causedbyextremeweatherevents,whichare intensifiedand increased in frequency
byclimatechange.Climate risk insuranceschemesmaybebothdirect and indirect.
Direct insurance approaches are those inwhich the insured benefits directly from
transferringrisktoarisktakingentity(suchasaninsurer). Intheevent theinsurance
agreement is triggered, the insurance payout is directly transferred to the insured.
Indirectinsuranceapproachesarethosewherethefinalintendedtargetgroupbenefits
indirectly frompayments intermediatedby an insuredgovernment or frombeing a
memberofan institution thathas insurance (Schäferet al. 2016; seealsochapterby
Linnerooth-Bayeret al. 2018 in thisbook).
This chapter argues that insurance can support people and communities on the
frontierof adaptation in severalways,helping themin
• exploring adaptation frontiers by contributing to a framework for signalling the
magnitude, location, and exposure to climate-related risks andproviding signals
whenadaptation limits areapproached;
• movingawayfromadaptationlimitsbyimprovingex-antedecisionmaking,incen-
tivisingriskreductionandcreatingaspaceofcertaintyforclimateresilientdevel-
opment;
• remaining in the tolerable risk spaceby facilitatingfinancial buffering as part of
contingencyapproacheswhenclimate-related risksexceedcurrent capabilities to
manage.
Inthefollowing,thedifferentrolesofinsuranceinexploringandmanagingadapta-
tionfrontiersaredescribedindetail.Ithastobenoted,however,thattransferringrisks
inacost-efficientwaythroughinsuranceisonlyonestepinasystematicprocess.The
effectivemanagement of adaptation frontiers, aimed at enabling climate-resilience
development,requiresacomprehensiveapproachtoriskmanagement.Thisapproach
should involve a portfolio of actions aimed at improving the understanding of dis-
aster risks, reducing and transferring risk aswell as responding to and recovering
fromeventsanddisasters—asopposed toasingular focusonanyoneactionor type
ofaction (seeFig.13.2).
Loss and Damage from Climate Change
Concepts, Methods and Policy Options
- Titel
- Loss and Damage from Climate Change
- Untertitel
- Concepts, Methods and Policy Options
- Autoren
- Reinhard Mechler
- Laurens M. Bouwer
- Thomas Schinko
- Swenja Surminski
- JoAnne Linnerooth-Bayer
- Verlag
- Springer Open
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-3-319-72026-5
- Abmessungen
- 16.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 580
- Schlagwörter
- Environment, Climate change, Environmental law, Environmental policy, Risk management
- Kategorien
- International
- Naturwissenschaften Umwelt und Klima