Comparing an insurer's perspective on building damages with modelled damages from pan-European winter windstorm event sets: a case study from Zurich, Switzerland

<p>With access to claims, insurers have a long tradition of being knowledge leaders on damages caused by windstorms. However, new opportunities have arisen to better assess the risks of winter windstorms in Europe through the availability of historic footprints provided by the Windstorm Inform...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: C. Welker, T. Röösli, D. N. Bresch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2021-01-01
Series:Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
Online Access:https://nhess.copernicus.org/articles/21/279/2021/nhess-21-279-2021.pdf
_version_ 1818844953905725440
author C. Welker
T. Röösli
T. Röösli
D. N. Bresch
D. N. Bresch
author_facet C. Welker
T. Röösli
T. Röösli
D. N. Bresch
D. N. Bresch
author_sort C. Welker
collection DOAJ
description <p>With access to claims, insurers have a long tradition of being knowledge leaders on damages caused by windstorms. However, new opportunities have arisen to better assess the risks of winter windstorms in Europe through the availability of historic footprints provided by the Windstorm Information Service (Copernicus WISC). In this study, we compare how modelling of building damages complements claims-based risk assessment. We describe and use two windstorm risk models: an insurer's proprietary model and the open source CLIMADA platform. Both use the historic WISC dataset and a purposefully built, probabilistic hazard event set of winter windstorms across Europe to model building damages in the canton of Zurich, Switzerland. These approaches project a considerably lower estimate for the annual average damage (CHF 1.4 million), compared to claims (CHF 2.3 million), which originates mainly from a different assessment of the return period of the most damaging historic event Lothar–Martin. Additionally, the probabilistic modelling approach allows assessment of rare events, such as a 250-year-return-period windstorm causing CHF 75 million in damages, including an evaluation of the uncertainties. Our study emphasizes the importance of complementing a claims-based perspective with a probabilistic risk modelling approach to better understand windstorm risks. The presented open-source model provides a straightforward entry point for small insurance companies.</p>
first_indexed 2024-12-19T05:21:58Z
format Article
id doaj.art-6086edf66295470b9dda01d7da738858
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1561-8633
1684-9981
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-19T05:21:58Z
publishDate 2021-01-01
publisher Copernicus Publications
record_format Article
series Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
spelling doaj.art-6086edf66295470b9dda01d7da7388582022-12-21T20:34:28ZengCopernicus PublicationsNatural Hazards and Earth System Sciences1561-86331684-99812021-01-012127929910.5194/nhess-21-279-2021Comparing an insurer's perspective on building damages with modelled damages from pan-European winter windstorm event sets: a case study from Zurich, SwitzerlandC. Welker0T. Röösli1T. Röösli2D. N. Bresch3D. N. Bresch4GVZ Gebäudeversicherung Kanton Zürich, Zurich, SwitzerlandInstitute for Environmental Decisions, ETH Zurich, Zurich, SwitzerlandFederal Office of Meteorology and Climatology MeteoSwiss, Zurich, SwitzerlandInstitute for Environmental Decisions, ETH Zurich, Zurich, SwitzerlandFederal Office of Meteorology and Climatology MeteoSwiss, Zurich, Switzerland<p>With access to claims, insurers have a long tradition of being knowledge leaders on damages caused by windstorms. However, new opportunities have arisen to better assess the risks of winter windstorms in Europe through the availability of historic footprints provided by the Windstorm Information Service (Copernicus WISC). In this study, we compare how modelling of building damages complements claims-based risk assessment. We describe and use two windstorm risk models: an insurer's proprietary model and the open source CLIMADA platform. Both use the historic WISC dataset and a purposefully built, probabilistic hazard event set of winter windstorms across Europe to model building damages in the canton of Zurich, Switzerland. These approaches project a considerably lower estimate for the annual average damage (CHF 1.4 million), compared to claims (CHF 2.3 million), which originates mainly from a different assessment of the return period of the most damaging historic event Lothar–Martin. Additionally, the probabilistic modelling approach allows assessment of rare events, such as a 250-year-return-period windstorm causing CHF 75 million in damages, including an evaluation of the uncertainties. Our study emphasizes the importance of complementing a claims-based perspective with a probabilistic risk modelling approach to better understand windstorm risks. The presented open-source model provides a straightforward entry point for small insurance companies.</p>https://nhess.copernicus.org/articles/21/279/2021/nhess-21-279-2021.pdf
spellingShingle C. Welker
T. Röösli
T. Röösli
D. N. Bresch
D. N. Bresch
Comparing an insurer's perspective on building damages with modelled damages from pan-European winter windstorm event sets: a case study from Zurich, Switzerland
Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences
title Comparing an insurer's perspective on building damages with modelled damages from pan-European winter windstorm event sets: a case study from Zurich, Switzerland
title_full Comparing an insurer's perspective on building damages with modelled damages from pan-European winter windstorm event sets: a case study from Zurich, Switzerland
title_fullStr Comparing an insurer's perspective on building damages with modelled damages from pan-European winter windstorm event sets: a case study from Zurich, Switzerland
title_full_unstemmed Comparing an insurer's perspective on building damages with modelled damages from pan-European winter windstorm event sets: a case study from Zurich, Switzerland
title_short Comparing an insurer's perspective on building damages with modelled damages from pan-European winter windstorm event sets: a case study from Zurich, Switzerland
title_sort comparing an insurer s perspective on building damages with modelled damages from pan european winter windstorm event sets a case study from zurich switzerland
url https://nhess.copernicus.org/articles/21/279/2021/nhess-21-279-2021.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT cwelker comparinganinsurersperspectiveonbuildingdamageswithmodelleddamagesfrompaneuropeanwinterwindstormeventsetsacasestudyfromzurichswitzerland
AT troosli comparinganinsurersperspectiveonbuildingdamageswithmodelleddamagesfrompaneuropeanwinterwindstormeventsetsacasestudyfromzurichswitzerland
AT troosli comparinganinsurersperspectiveonbuildingdamageswithmodelleddamagesfrompaneuropeanwinterwindstormeventsetsacasestudyfromzurichswitzerland
AT dnbresch comparinganinsurersperspectiveonbuildingdamageswithmodelleddamagesfrompaneuropeanwinterwindstormeventsetsacasestudyfromzurichswitzerland
AT dnbresch comparinganinsurersperspectiveonbuildingdamageswithmodelleddamagesfrompaneuropeanwinterwindstormeventsetsacasestudyfromzurichswitzerland