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21 InsuranceasaResponse toLossandDamage? 497
hurricanes and earthquakes to its participatingmember countries (UNISDR2017).
A second regional pool, Africa Risk Capacity (ARC)was established in 2012 as
a specialised agency of the African Union to help member states improve their
capacities to better plan, prepare and respond to natural disasters (Wilcox 2014).
Recently,athirdregionalsovereignriskpoolingarrangementhasbeencreatedforthe
Pacificislandstates,thePacificCatastropheRiskAssessmentandFinancingInitiative
(PCRAFI) (WorldBank2017). Inall threecases,disbursements fromthepoolgo to
participatinggovernmentsfor thepurposeofsupportingtheirpost-disasterreliefand
reconstructionefforts,althoughonlyoneof thepools(ARC)makesrequirementson
how thedisbursements areusedby requesting itsmembers toprovidedetails about
contingencymanagement anddisbursementwhen they join thepool.
Akeyfeatureofall threepools is theparametricnatureof the insurancecontract,
which, asdiscussed formicro-insurance,makespayments faster and theclaimpro-
cesslesscostlythantraditionalindemnity-basedinsuranceproductsforwhichclaims
arepaidbasedonassessments of loss throughon-site verification. Fast payment of
claims is especially critical. Intervening quickly after a disaster can provide gov-
ernmentswith funds that supporthouseholdsandprevent theadoptionofdamaging
copingstrategies (suchas sellingoffor slaughtering livestock).Abenefit-cost anal-
ysiscarriedoutontheARCshowsthatgettingaid tohouseholds in thecritical three
monthsafterharvestcanresult ineconomicgainsofoverUSD1,200perhousehold
assisted(ClarkeandHill2013).CCRIFannouncedthatitspayoutstoCaribbeangov-
ernmentsdue to the impactsofHurricaneIrma,whichdevastatedmanyislandstates
inSeptember 2017,will reach$31.2million, and the facility has nowpassed$100
millionof payouts tomembers since its launch.All of the $100millionof payouts
weremade tomemberswithin14daysof thecatastropheevents that triggered their
parametric insurancepolicies (ARTEMIS2017a).
Advancing ex ante riskmanagement is also important in all three regional pro-
grams, especiallywith respect todeveloping theknowledgebaseonwhichdisaster
risk reduction andmanagement policy can be pursued. Each poolmakes an effort,
paid for by donors, tomeasure and quantify disaster risk in the relevant region by
examining not only the hazard but also exposure and vulnerability using detailed
mapping, data andmodelling toolsdevelopedexplicitly for thispurpose.Anexam-
ple isARC’smodelling platform calledAfricanRiskView. It providesmodelling
input toARCfor insurancepurposes, but also aims to be afinancial earlywarning
tool, supportinggovernmentdecision-makerswithcost estimatesbeforeandduring
a drought season.As such it can trigger early action and risk reductionmeasures.
Themodels and quantification of risk constitutemajor progress as privatemarkets
and the governments of the regionwere not supplying this information previously.
If combinedwith technical assistance and capacity building these advances in risk
informationcanleadtoacultureofriskmanagementacrossgovernments,potentially
inducingamoreanticipatoryapproach to risk (VividEconomicset al. 2016).
ARCiscurrentlypreparing for the launchofanadditional tool, theExtremeCli-
mateFacility(ARC-XCF),whichaimstoaddressadaptationandresilienceshortfalls
inAfricancountries in the faceof climatechange.XCFisdesigned to takeaccount
of increasing riskof extremeweather event activity inorder todisperse funds tobe