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As the 2006 Atlantic hurricane season draws to a close, Risk Management Solutions (RMS) has reaffirmed its forecast of increased hurricane activity over the next five years.
For the period 2007-2011, the company is projecting higher annualized insurance losses of 40 percent above average across the Gulf Coast, Florida, and the Southeast, and 25-30 percent above average in the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast coastal regions. Averages are derived from long-term (1900-2006) historical hurricane frequencies. RMS first released this view of risk before the 2006 hurricane season, for the five-year period of 2006-2010.
"As part of our annual review of medium-term landfall frequency in the Atlantic, RMS held its second expert elicitation in October 2006, presenting a range of statistical models to a panel of seven of the world's leading hurricane scientists," said Joshua Darr, director of model management at RMS. "This expert panel concluded that the forthcoming five-year period of hurricane landfall frequency would be very similar to our original five-year projection established last year."
A key driver of the current elevated view of landfalling hurricane risk is an increase of more than 30 percent in the modeled frequency of major (Saffir-Simpson Category 3-5) hurricanes making landfall in the US, to account for current elevated levels of hurricane activity in the Atlantic basin that are expected to persist for at least the next five years. The increased frequency and intensity of hurricane activity in the Atlantic Ocean Basin, as observed since 1995, are driven by higher sea surface temperatures in the tropical North Atlantic and by associated changes in atmospheric circulation.
Mr. Darr added that the experts also reaffirmed that the "increase in activity of the most severe Category 3-5 hurricanes will be higher than the increase in Category 1-2 storms, based on the high likelihood of warmer than normal sea surface temperatures in the tropical Atlantic."
www.rms.com

•Date: 29th Nov 2006• Region: US •Type: Article •Topic: DR general
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