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Munich Re estimates that insured losses in 2025 will reach $108 billion due to wildfires and storms

Munich Re estimates that insured losses in 2025 will reach $108 billion due to wildfires and storms
Munich Re estimates that insured losses in 2025 will reach $108 billion due to wildfires and storms

Munich Re reported in a report on Tuesday that global insured losses from disasters dropped to $108 billion.

The German reinsurer stated that the U.S. mainland avoided hurricanes for the first time since 10 years.

The total estimate of Munich Re for the last year is $107 billion higher than Swiss Re's, which was published in December.

Insured losses accounted for $98 billion, primarily due to damage from wildfires, severe storms, and floods.

Munich Re said that this was more than the inflation-adjusted annual average of $60 billion for the last 10 years.

Thomas Blunck is a member on the management board of Munich Re. He said that "the year started off with a rough start due to the high losses caused by wildfires in Los Angeles."

"Sheer good fortune spared the United States of hurricane landfalls by 2025." Blunck said that the country still ranks first in terms of losses.

Munich Re reported that the Los Angeles wildfires would be the most expensive insured disaster in 2025, followed by thunderstorms lasting for days in southern and central U.S. States in March.

Tobias Grimm is the chief climate scientist at Munich Re.

In a report published in June of last year, the European Environment Agency stated that between 2015 and 2024, the global average temperature was 1.24 to 1.28 degrees Celsius warmer than preindustrial levels. This decade is therefore considered as one of warmest on record.

Total losses due to natural catastrophes, including those that are not covered by insurance policies, fell below the 10-year average in 2025 and were $224 billion, down from $368 in 2024.

Munich Re has said that an?earthquake in Myanmar of 7.7 magnitude, which occurred in March and only a small portion of the damage was insured, is the second-most expensive disaster in terms of total losses by 2025. (Reporting and writing by Christina Amann; editing by Alexander Smith).

(source: Reuters)