Natural Disasters Set a Record $135 Billion in Claims in 2017

And this may be the new normal, according to one agency.

By Dan Bova Jan 05, 2018
Win McNamee | Getty Images

Hurricanes, wildfires and earthquakes did a record amount of damage this past year, according to Munich Re, a German-based reinsurer.

According to Munich Re’s natural catastrophe review, the insurance industry was hit with a record-high $135 billion bill. Overall losses, including the uninsured, topped $330 billion. 2017 was the second most costliest year in history behind 2011, when the Tohoku earthquake in Japan caused $354 billion in today’s dollars.

The U.S. share of losses in 2017 was higher than average: 50 percent as compared to the long-term average of 32 percent.

Related: Staying on Course Despite the Ravages of Hurricane Maria

In a year that saw a frightening abundance of catastrophic events that destroyed property and lives, Hurricane Harvey was the costliest disaster of 2017, doing $85 billion in damages. Ernst Rauch, head of Munich Re’s Corporate Climate Center, which monitors climate change risks, told Reuters he expects more frequent extreme events in years to come.

“We have a new normal,” he said. “2017 was not an outlier.”

Related: 5 Ways You Can Help Mexico After the Deadly Earthquake

Hurricanes, wildfires and earthquakes did a record amount of damage this past year, according to Munich Re, a German-based reinsurer.

According to Munich Re’s natural catastrophe review, the insurance industry was hit with a record-high $135 billion bill. Overall losses, including the uninsured, topped $330 billion. 2017 was the second most costliest year in history behind 2011, when the Tohoku earthquake in Japan caused $354 billion in today’s dollars.

The U.S. share of losses in 2017 was higher than average: 50 percent as compared to the long-term average of 32 percent.

Related: Staying on Course Despite the Ravages of Hurricane Maria

In a year that saw a frightening abundance of catastrophic events that destroyed property and lives, Hurricane Harvey was the costliest disaster of 2017, doing $85 billion in damages. Ernst Rauch, head of Munich Re’s Corporate Climate Center, which monitors climate change risks, told Reuters he expects more frequent extreme events in years to come.

“We have a new normal,” he said. “2017 was not an outlier.”

Related: 5 Ways You Can Help Mexico After the Deadly Earthquake

The rest of this article is locked.

Join Entrepreneur+ today for access.

Subscribe Now

Already have an account? Sign In

Dan Bova

VP of Special Projects at Entrepreneur.com
Entrepreneur Staff
Dan Bova is the VP of Special Projects at Entrepreneur.com and host of the How Success Happens podcast. He previously worked at Jimmy Kimmel Live, Maxim, and Spy magazine. His latest books for kids include This Day in History, Car and Driver's Trivia Zone, Road & Track Crew's Big & Fast Cars, The Big Little...

Related Content