East Rand declared Natural Catastrophe Zone by insurers

Make sure you know exactly what you are covered for.

The East Rand has been declared a NatCat (Natural Catastrophe) zone by insurers after heavy rainfalls and flash floods caused extensive damage to vehicles and property this week.

“As at lunchtime on November 10, over 150 claims had already been lodged in Aon’s call centre alone, and continue to pour in.

“Some insurers has set up facilities at salvage yards for vehicles that were submerged to be immediately assessed.

“Huge property losses have also been incurred, especially in the vicinity of the Jukskei River which burst its banks.

“While it’s still too early to quantify the extent of the damage, expectations are that these will be significant and that claims handling will be kicked into high gear to deal with the influx,” said Mandy Barrett, manager of personal lines marketing and sales at Aon South Africa.

According to Aon South Africa, risk advisors and insurance brokerage, in the last four years, weather-related damage has cost the insurance industry a staggering R2.5-billion in losses.

While severe weather is not an uncommon occurrence in South Africa, what makes the events in Gauteng particularly noteworthy is the net retained exposure that the province represents.

Gauteng’s built-up area constitutes only 0.5 per cent of SA’s land surface area, but due to the fact that the area is so densely populated, Gauteng constitutes 35 per cent of the exposure to catastrophic events such as hail storms and flash floods.

Many consumers still believe that we are more insulated from extreme weather conditions such as hail storms, floods and strong winds, so they tend to cut their cover on the flawed premise that extreme weather events are too unlikely to happen.

You certainly don’t have to live in the vicinity of a dam, lake or river to experience floods as these events proved.

“One of the most important lessons consumers can take out of the recent weather catastrophes is to assess whether they are properly covered for worst case scenarios before it is too late.

“In this regard, a professional broker plays an invaluable role in guiding you through a proper needs analysis, interpreting the policy terms and conditions, helping you mitigate your risk, and in turn managing your premium costs.

“Insuring your most important assets – likely to be your vehicles, home and everything in it – and your ability to recover from a major catastrophe, should be approached in the same way as investing in the stock market – you’re unlikely to do it without professional advice,” said Mandy.

Many people don’t have a clue what their policy terms and provisions actually mean.

If going the D-I-Y approach without professional advice, it’s unlikely that they will be able to differentiate what is being sacrificed if premium price is their only means of comparing insurance covers.

Cheap insurance premiums are cheap for a reason – they usually cover only the absolute basics and any additional cover such as hail, flood damage and so on need to be purchased at an additional premium.

If you don’t know this, you could assume that you’re covered for a peril when in fact you are not.

You’re likely to find this out the hard way – at claims time – when it is too late.

Aon offers the following advice for policyholders filing claims after the flash floods:

According to Aon, severe weather conditions, from golf ball-sized hail to heavy rainfalls and flooding are a far more regular occurrence and will continue to increase in frequency and voracity.

Consumers need to make sure that their insurance policies cover them comprehensively, not only for the damage, but for any alternative arrangements that need to be made while the damage is being repaired.

 

Other articles you may be interested in:

Thunderstorm, flooding leaves disaster in its wake

ER24 safety tips for flash floods

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