Total Harvey cost could be as high as $100bn, say insurance experts
Source: The Guardian
Total Harvey cost could be as high as $100bn, say insurance experts
Damage inflicted in Texas by tropical storm may be more than Hurricane Sandy and many victims are likely to be uninsured
Julia Kollewe
Tuesday 29 August 2017 13.44 BST
With the catastrophic Texas floods triggered by the former hurricane Harvey set to worsen, early estimates suggest the financial damage it has inflicted has already run into tens of billions of dollars, and one forecaster has predicted the final bill could be as high as $100bn (£77bn).
The tropical storm continues to batter south-eastern Texas, where it has so far claimed at least nine lives, and is expected to reach southern Louisiana. Thousands of homes have been flooded forcing residents to seek emergency shelter. US authorities estimate 30,000 people will need shelter.
So far predictions of the final cost of the damage vary widely. Some insurance analysts are putting the likely damage at $30 to $50bn but point out that not all of this sum will be covered by insurance. However, David Havens, an insurance analyst at Imperial Capital in New York, told Bloomberg News the final bill could reach as much as $100bn.
This compares with damage of $120bn caused by hurricane Katrina in 2005, which included $80bn of insured losses, and the $75bn economic losses caused by hurricane Sandy in 2012.
-snip-
Read more:
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/aug/29/total-harvey-cost-insurance-texas-tropical-storm-hurricane-sandy