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Our federal government does not like to talk about climate change, so the Insurance Bureau of Canada has released a hard hitting report on the damage that climate change is already causing in Canada: Telling the Weather Story: Can Canada Manage the Storms Ahead? 

This is the same message that the National Round Table on Environment and Economy has been sending, and for which it is being abolished. Our federal government may be able to silence the NRTEE, but they can’t silence the Insurance Bureau of Canada, or the huge losses its members are experiencing. And has Mr. Harper noticed The Economist’s special feature on The Melting North? or the World Bank’s estimate that the costs of adapting to climate change, between 2010 and 2050, will be $75 to $100 billion every year?

As The Economist puts it: “It is already clear what is required: policies to put an appropriate price on carbon emissions… sufficient to persuade polluters to develop and adopt cleaner technologies…”

Here is an excerpt from the Insurance Bureau report:

“Canada’s climate is changing.

This analysis reveals that the warming of the world’s climate system is unequivocal based
on observed increases in global average air and ocean temperatures. The year 2010 ranked,
together with 2005 and 1998, as the warmest on record…
In Canada, on average, temperatures warmed by more than 1.3°C between 1948 and 2007, a
rate of warming that was about twice the global average. The national average temperature
for the year 2010 was 3.0°C above normal, which makes it the warmest year on record since
nationwide records began in 1948. Canada has also become wetter during the past half
century, with mean precipitation across the country increasing by about 12%. On average,
Canada now experiences 20 more days of rain compared with the 1950s. These changes to the
climate are likely responsible, at least in part, for the rising frequency and severity of extreme
weather events in Canada, such as floods, storms and droughts, because warmer temperatures
tend to produce more violent weather patterns.

These weather trends are already affecting Canadians.

People around the world, including Canadians, are already seeing the impact of severe
weather in terms of lost lives and injuries, families displaced from their homes, and towns that
are devastated. The personal and social costs of these losses are incalculable.
Insurers have seen first-hand the financial impacts of severe weather, as insured losses from
natural catastrophes have ranged between $10B and $50B a year internationally over the
past decade. In Canada, catastrophic events cost roughly $1.6B in 2011 and almost $1B in
each of the two previous years. The majority of these insured losses were caused by extreme
weather events, but Canada’s home and business insurers are also seeing an increase in claims
resulting from smaller weather events that nevertheless result in significant property damage
for consumers. These losses are driven in part by Canada’s aging sewer infrastructure, which
is often incapable of handling the new, higher levels of precipitation, while the fact that
homeowners are investing more in costly basement upgrades also has an impact on claims.
As a result, water claims have now surpassed fire as the number one cause of home insurance
losses in many parts of the country.

The climate will continue to change, with varying impacts across Canada’s regions.

The earth is projected to warm by another 1.5°C by 2050. This change in the climate is
expected to have varying impacts on temperature, precipitation and extreme weather trends
throughout Canada, depending on the region of the country and the season.
By 2050, northern Canada is expected to warm the greatest amount during the winter, while
southwestern Canada is likely to warm the most during the summer. Over this same period,
seasonal average precipitation is projected to decline over parts of western and Atlantic
Canada in the summer, while average precipitation is likely to increase over all of Canada in
the winter. Region-specific information on the projected weather trends is provided in the
Regional Syntheses section of this report.

Severe weather is projected to increase over the next 40 years.

Future trends in the frequency and severity of extreme weather will have a significant impact
on the ability of individuals, governments and insurance companies to prepare for future
catastrophic events. This is a concern given that the IPCC has concluded that it is very likely
that extreme weather such as hot extremes, heat waves and heavy precipitation events will
become more frequent over the next 50 years.
The frequency with which Canada experiences events such as heavy rainfall of a given
intensity (known as the return period), is projected to increase such that an event that
occurred on average once every 50 years will be likely to occur about once every 35 years by
2050. Even in regions of the country where average rainfall is projected to decrease in the
summer, the frequency at which severe precipitation events occur is expected to increase over
the next 40 years.
Changes to Canada’s climate will also have implications for climate effects other than
changing precipitation patterns. The occurrence of forest fire activity is projected to increase
by 25% by 2030, with major regional variations as certain parts of the country become hotter
and drier than others. Recent observations have led to projections of global mean sea level
rises of 1 metre or more over the next century, with tangible impacts for Canada’s coastal
regions. Where information is available, this report also provides projected changes to severe
wind/thunderstorms, hail, and freezing rain events.

Canada must adapt to this new reality.

These historical and projected trends point to the need for Canada to adapt its existing
infrastructure now in order to minimize the social and economic costs associated with severe
weather. Given the real threat of climate change, governments, communities, and individual
home and business owners can use the information contained within this report to help make
targeted decisions about how to adapt existing public and private impacts to manage the risks…

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