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California asks insurers for $1 billion to support FAIR Plan following the LA Fires

California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara requested that the commission's members provide $1 billion to support the FAIR Plan, which is backed by the state. Wildfires devastated large areas of Los Angeles and the surrounding area last month.

Lara directed the people responsible for the FAIR Plan, an insurance program that helps property owners who can't find coverage on private markets, to hire more staff. She also told them to use all funds available including reinsurance and reserves.

Officials have reported that two fires, one on each side of Los Angeles, burned an area the size of Washington, D.C. from January 7 to their containment, killing 29 and damaging or destroying over 16,000 buildings.

According to its website, as of February 9, FAIR Plan had received approximately 3,469 claims for damages caused by the Palisades Fire. It also received approximately 1,325 claims relating to damage caused by Eaton Fire. More than $914 millions has been paid to policyholders.

In a Tuesday statement, Lara stated that "the FAIR Plan has to pay claims like any other insurer."

In a statement, the Department of Insurance stated that the funding request was necessary to ensure the FAIR Plan continues to meet its obligations towards Californians.

The request for funds could increase financial pressure on insurers, who have already been hit by a rise in catastrophe claims after several wildfires and natural disasters during the last two years.

Last month, the catastrophe risk modelling firm KCC estimated that insured losses from the Los Angeles fires were about $28 billion. This makes them the most expensive in U.S. History. (Reporting from Kanjyik in Bengaluru, editing by Christopher Cushing).

(source: Reuters)