Flood
risk rampant across Asia's factory zones
Global
insurance companies are struggling to get a grip on their flood
exposure in Asia nearly a year after one of the world's costliest
disasters hit Thailand, with executives fearing an even worse event
looms in the region
22
July, 2012
Some
firms learnt from the Thai floods, with new defenses built to protect
multi-billion dollar industrial estates in the country. Insurance
premiums have also gone up, but factory construction in flood-prone
areas remains rampant across Asia.
Insurance
executives say the industry is vulnerable to another major flood,
with scientists identifying the coastal plains of southern China as
one area at greatest risk.
"When
I go and look at these industrial parks and ports in some of the
low-lying coastal areas, I just have to stand back and think: Who's
insuring these things? Who's done the risk assessment?" said
Adam Switzer, a coastal scientist at the Earth Observatory in
Singapore.
"What
I consistently see on the coasts throughout Asia is that we're still
making the same sorts of mistakes."
The
Thai floods hit nearly 1,000 factories feeding global supply chains -
particularly in the auto sector - costing insurers an estimated $20
billion.
In
the rush for development that has lifted millions out of poverty in
Asia, many factories have been built along coasts, especially in
river deltas. According to insurance industry executives, most
construction was done without long-term historical data on floods and
storms.
On
top of that, rising sea levels, increasing rainfall and more intense
storms - together with more people and infrastructure - mean the
risks have multiplied.
"We
should be identifying these pockets of exposure earlier," said
Scott Ryrie, Asia-Pacific vice chairman for Guy Carpenter, a global
insurance industry services firm.
The
goal, insurance executives say, is to break the cycle of paying for
the same losses over and over again.
After
the Thai floods, global reinsurer Swiss Re reassessed flood risk in
emerging markets. The report's No. 1 risk was China, whose vast
industrial estates are at the heart of global manufacturing, making
everything from iPads to brake pads.
Among
other Asian countries listed, Malaysia was 5, Indonesia 7 and India
10. Thailand was ninth.
Munich
Re and Guy Carpenter have also reviewed flood risk models,
particularly for industrial parks in Asia.
"A
new risk awareness has to set in along the entire value chain,"
said Tobias Farny, Munich Re's Asia-Pacific chief executive. "The
exposures present need to be defined, described and ring-fenced in
order to become insurable."
Ryrie
said insurers in many countries have contained risks by imposing
tighter payout limits and pushing for better historical data to
improve risk models.
WHERE
NEXT?
At
an industrial estate on the flat plains north of Bangkok, where
Japan's Toshiba makes lighting and home appliances, workers rush to
finish a 9.5-km (6-mile) concrete and earth dike that is 1.5 meters
(5 ft) higher than the old one.
Behind
them, a brown stain runs along the factory buildings where
floodwaters lingered for two months, knocking out major foreign-owned
manufacturing operations and triggering a flurry of business
interruption claims around the world.
Many
in the insurance sector agree that an even bigger loss is likely in
China, the motor of global manufacturing, where large areas of
factory estates are vulnerable to flooding and storms.
Fierce
competition among Chinese insurers, low premium prices and a lack of
long-term disaster risk assessment mean insurance companies are
potentially exposed to big losses.
"If
we have a really extreme event in China, I am quite certain there
would be some surprises for the insurance industry," said Jens
Mehlhorn, head of Swiss Re's flood group. "The flooding we see
currently in China is just average flooding. We haven't seen a 50- or
100-year flood event in the past 5 to 10 years."
The
Pearl River Delta is one of China's biggest industrial zones. The
western side of the delta, constructed on sediment-filled fish ponds
and rice paddies, is flat for up to 100 km (60 miles) inland, and 40
percent is less than 2 meters (6.5 ft) above sea level.
The
government has not published detailed maps showing China's most
critical flood zones.
Meanwhile,
competition in one of the world's biggest insurance markets has
driven the cost of property cover 20 to 30 percent below what it is
in other Asian markets, said Alex Yip, China chairman and general
manager of insurance broker and corporate advisor JLT Lixin.
Price
competition last year was so brutal that China's No. 2 insurer by
market capitalization, Ping An, recorded a nearly 200 million yuan
($31 million) loss on its corporate property and casualty
underwriting, despite no major flood loss claims.
Ping
An said in an email it cares more about the big picture than the
profitability of individual policies. In 2011, Ping An's property and
casualty division overall made a net profit of just under 5 billion
yuan ($785 million).
Flood
insurance in China is typically sold as part of a general property
policy and does not have an upper claims limit, industry experts
said. Rapid development and high levels of foreign investment mean
the amount insurers are on the hook for in the next major flood has
gone up.
"For
floods and for earthquakes, to be honest, for international
standards, the price is inadequate," said Zhang Qing, the
Beijing-based general manager for State-owned PICC Property &
Casualty Co's reinsurance business.
A
recent study by Texas A&M University and Yale University shows
the amount of developed land in low-elevation coastal areas in China
is skyrocketing. In 2000, 13,500 sq km (5,200 sq miles) of
low-elevation coastal land had been built up. By 2030, that is set to
nearly quintuple to 63,600 sq km (24,500 sq m), an area nearly as
large as the Netherlands and Belgium combined.
Another
study, in the journal Irrigation and Drainage in 2010, said one third
of China's farmland, two-thirds of its people, more than 60 percent
of its cities and 80 percent of its GDP were threatened by floods.
Maryam
Golnaraghi, chief of the World Meteorological Organization's disaster
risk reduction division, said Chinese data is often not detailed
enough to be useful - and that some government agencies feel
information on water flows is too sensitive to share.
LESSONS
LEARNED
Thailand
is Asia's most developed auto parts market and a hub for the likes of
Toyota, Honda and Mercedes-Benz, making cars and car parts the
country's No. 1 export this year. The floods disrupted more than 100
components makers.
Over
the past year, property insurance rates in Thailand have doubled
or tripled and flood cover greatly reduced or even refused in some
cases, said Jiraphant Asvantanakul, president of The General
Insurance Association of Thailand.
Manufacturers
such as Toshiba are moving machinery to the second storey, setting up
sister operations in other countries and finding back-up warehouses
and suppliers, though the bulk of operations remain in Thailand.
"I
think the factories will stick with Thailand because the supply chain
network is still very strong ... it is not that easy to move,"
said Kobkarn Watanavarangkul, executive chairwoman of Toshiba's Thai
unit.
Toshiba's
factories are in the Bangkadi industrial estate, one of seven parks
built on former rice paddies on floodplains north of Bangkok that
were inundated last year, affecting companies such as Sony, Canon and
Honda.
Close
to where workers were toiling to build new flood defenses to protect
the complex was a bronze statue of an elderly couple standing on
sandbags.
They
are the estate's founders and the statue commemorates a flood in 1995
in which 1 million sandbags were used to fend off high waters, a
reminder that this is not the first time the estate has been
threatened.
Insurers
and reinsurers are also worried about dense concentrations of
factories in other parts of Asia, particularly in and around the
Indonesian capital Jakarta, where floods in 2005 and 2007 hit large
areas.
The
low-lying coastal city has 13 rivers flowing through it, is subsiding
in parts and faces rising sea levels. It is the nation's
manufacturing base with U.S., European and Japanese firms operating
factories.
In
Cikarang, east of Jakarta, five industrial estates with more than
3,000 plants employ over 1 million people.
Farny
of Munich Re said natural catastrophe awareness was growing only
slowly among insured firms and governments.
"But
it is growing," he said.
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