Introductory Info
Date introduced: 9 February
2022
House: House of
Representatives
Portfolio: Treasury
Commencement: On
Royal Assent
Purpose of the Bill
The purpose of the Treasury
Laws Amendment (Cyclone and Flood Damage Reinsurance Pool) Bill 2022 is to
establish a reinsurance pool backed by an Australian Government guarantee for
cyclone damage, to be operated by the Australian Reinsurance Pool Corporation
(ARPC). This will add to the ARPC’s existing function of operating a
reinsurance pool for terrorism risk.
The Government’s intent is to indirectly reduce
residential and small business property insurance premiums in cyclone-prone
locations, primarily in northern Australia, by making it cheaper for insurance
companies to reinsure their exposure to cyclone risks.
Specifically, the Bill will amend the Terrorism Insurance
Act 2003 (proposed to be renamed the Terrorism and Cyclone Insurance
Act 2003) to:
- make
it mandatory for insurers that provide cyclone cover to reinsure all their
contracted cyclone risk exposure with the ARPC (with minor exceptions)
- require
the ARPC to seek to meet or offset future claims by charging sufficient
(reinsurance) premiums to insurers participating in the pool; and if it cannot,
provide a recourse to a $10 billion Australian Government guarantee (reinstated
annually)
-
specify how ‘cyclone events’ and associated ‘claims periods’ will
be declared by the ARPC
-
defer to regulations matters including:
- the meteorological criteria defining a cyclone (in the Exposure Draft
regulations, this is based on the typical characteristics of tropical cyclones)
- an
additional period after a cyclone ends, during which related damage commencing
during that period would still be covered by the scheme (in the draft
regulations, 48 hours)
-
the threshold for determining which insurers must subscribe to
the reinsurance scheme based on their size, with reference to their income from
premiums (in the draft regulations, insurers with total gross premiums of $10
million from policies that provide any sort of cyclone cover) and
- the threshold for defining non-residential (eg business and
not-for-profit) insurance policies for the purposes of inclusion in the scheme
(in the draft regulations, policies covering up to $5 million are included).[1]
Background
Why are insurance premiums for natural disaster cover so
high in some places?
The amount a consumer pays an insurer for insurance cover
is called a ‘premium’. Insurers set a significant component of the premiums
they charge based on their belief about the likelihood and probable size of
claims. If an insurer considers a given property more likely to suffer
damage (or likely to suffer more severe damage) than others, it will
seek to reduce its financial risk exposure by charging a higher premium to
offset the greater expected claims cost. Insurers will often also set a higher
excess (ie how much damage the insured consumer must pay for themselves).
In addition to the risk to an individual property,
insurers also ‘price in’ the risk that they might have to pay out many large
insurance claims at once. While this is unlikely for many insured risks, such
as theft or car crashes, it is highly likely in the case of disasters such as
floods, bushfires, cyclones, severe storms and terrorist attacks. One way to
manage the financial risk of providing natural disaster cover is simply to
charge higher premiums in areas at risk; another is to pay a separate insurer
to provide ‘reinsurance’, and recoup that cost through premiums.
Property owners in areas at high risk of natural disasters
can therefore be charged very high premiums compared with national averages.
This can lead to a significant level of under-insurance or non-insurance in
disaster-prone communities, as insurance becomes unaffordable for those most likely
to need to make a claim. In turn, under-insurance and non-insurance means that
more of the cost of natural disasters must be borne by the victims of disasters
(individuals, businesses or community organisations), and by governments in
cases where victims cannot self-fund repairs and reconstruction. Without
adequate insurance, it takes longer for local communities and their economies
to recover after disasters.
What role do cyclones play in insurance unaffordability in
northern Australia?
In May 2017, the Australian Government directed the
Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) to conduct an inquiry
into the supply of residential home and contents insurance and strata insurance
in northern Australia.[2]
The ACCC found that ‘Home and contents insurance premiums
are considerably higher, and have risen faster, in northern Australia’ than
elsewhere,[3]
and that this was caused by the region’s higher risk of natural disasters.[4]
The ACCC found that large, frequent natural disaster claims had resulted in
insurers in northern Australia making net losses, with cyclones representing
the largest claims expense category from 2008–09 to 2017–18.[5]
The ACCC identified the cost of providing cyclone cover as
the largest driver of prohibitively high premiums for many property owners in
northern Australia:
Premium components for cyclone, and in some places flood,
make up a large proportion of technical premiums (the insurer’s expected cost
to supply insurance plus a margin) in northern Australia. Cyclone premium
components are high for many policies in northern Australia, but are
particularly large in north Western Australia.[6]
Figure 4.9 (see page 6 of Digest) in the ACCC’s
report illustrates the dominance of cyclone risk in two example insurers’ home
and contents insurance policies in northern Australia compared with the rest of
the country.
What is reinsurance and
how does it affect premiums?
As explained in the Regulation Impact Statement for the
Bill, ‘Reinsurance is insurance for insurers’.[7]
In simple terms, the reinsurer – usually another insurance company – agrees to
take on a portion of the liability if claims from a given type of disaster
event (such as a natural disaster or terrorist attack) exceed an agreed
threshold. The greater the risk the reinsurer takes on, the greater the premium
it charges the client insurance company – which ultimately flows through to the
premiums the latter charges its customers. Accordingly, reinsurance costs are
one component of the premiums paid by consumers.
The ACCC’s investigations into insurance in northern
Australia found that reinsurance was a significant component of premiums in
some locations in northern Australia, such as Port Hedland, though on average
far less significant than the cost of natural peril claims themselves, as shown
by Figures 4.5 (below) and 4.6 (page 7 of Digest) in its final
report.
Source:
ACCC, Northern
Australia Insurance Inquiry – Final Report (Canberra: ACCC, 2020), 76.
Source: ACCC, Northern
Australia Insurance Inquiry – Final Report (Canberra: ACCC, 2020), 73.
Source: ACCC, Northern
Australia Insurance Inquiry – Final Report (Canberra: ACCC, 2020), 74.
What solutions have been proposed previously?
Natural disaster insurance unaffordability has been considered
by several inquiries, including:
-
Treasury’s Natural Disaster Insurance Review (2011)[8]
-
the Productivity Commission’s Inquiry into Natural Disaster
Funding Arrangements (2014)[9]
-
the inquiry by the Treasury’s Northern Australia Insurance
Premiums Taskforce (2015)[10]
-
the Royal Commission into Natural Disaster Arrangements (2020)[11]
-
the ACCC’s Northern Australia insurance inquiry (2020)[12]
and
-
the inquiry by the Senate Select Committee on the effectiveness
of the Australian Government’s Northern Australia agenda (Senate Select
Committee) (2021).[13]
While different in focus and scope, these inquires all
observed increases in insurance premiums in parts of Australia subject to
natural disasters, and all grappled to some extent with the question of how to
fix this – that is, how to keep natural disaster insurance affordable for most
people – without creating different problems, such as financial
unsustainability and moral hazard.[14]
Of those
past inquiries, 5 considered reinsurance pools specifically, of which 2 (the
Productivity Commission in 2014 and ACCC in 2020) did not support them,[15]
1 was cautious though not explicitly opposed (the Senate Select Committee in
2021),[16]
1 found that a cyclone reinsurance pool would be more feasible than a
mutual cyclone insurer (the inquiry’s terms of reference specified that these
two models be assessed) but emphasised the risks and limitations (Treasury’s
Northern Australia Insurance Premiums Taskforce in 2015)[17]
and 1 made a positive recommendation to implement such a pool, in the context
of a more holistic package of measures (Treasury’s earlier Natural Disaster
Insurance Review of 2011).[18]
Treasury’s Natural Disaster Insurance Review
(2011) recommended an ‘integrated solution’ to flood insurance challenges,
including premium discounts for homes in flood-prone areas, the national
coordination of flood risk management and mitigation, and the provision of
subsidised flood insurance premiums via a government-sponsored reinsurance
facility, to be administered by a new national disaster risk and insurance
agency.[19]
Although the Review proposed that the reinsurance facility should also cover
cyclone risk, it thought cyclone cover should not be subsidised (in contrast to
flood cover), recommending instead that the need for cyclone cover subsidies in
northern Australia be investigated in future.[20]
The proposed model for the reinsurance facility differed from that envisaged by
the present Bill.[21]
The Productivity Commission’s Inquiry into Natural
Disaster Funding Arrangements (2014) warned against reinsurance pools, advising:
pooling risk or subsidising premiums for households
(including through government-backed reinsurance) would reduce policy holders’
incentives to reduce their exposure to risks, either through mitigation or
moving away from high-risk areas
and that government interventions in property insurance
markets internationally had been ‘overwhelmingly ineffective’, creating ‘moral
hazard as well as fiscal risks’.[22]
By contrast, the Commission noted ‘some evidence that
large-scale mitigation measures have led to lower insurance costs’,[23]
and recommended that the Australian Government increase mitigation funding to the
states to $200 million a year, to be matched by the states.[24]
It further noted ‘Evidence exists that cyclone building codes have reduced insurance
premiums’,[25]
particularly through reduced post-disaster reconstruction costs (expectations
of which inform premium calculations). It cited evidence from Geoscience
Australia on the impact of building code changes following Cyclone Tracy in
1974, estimating that the resulting improvements in building standards meant
that if the same cyclone had re-occurred in 2008, the reconstruction cost would
have been 90 per cent lower.[26]
The Commission also strongly recommended the phase-out of state insurance taxes
and levies, which it said ‘distort price signals and reduce affordability’.[27]
The inquiry by the Treasury’s Northern Australia Insurance
Premiums Taskforce (2015) recommended a focus on mitigation measures to reduce
the risk of cyclone damage, as ‘the only way to reduce premiums on a
sustainable basis’.[28]
The Taskforce also considered a reinsurance pool very similar to the model in
this Bill and estimated it could achieve modest average reductions in premiums.
It advised:
A reinsurance pool which charged premiums to cover the
estimated long-run cost of claims from cyclones and was supported by a
Government guarantee might offer a premium reduction for consumers of 10–15 per
cent. … The 10–15 per cent premium reduction under a partially funded scheme
refers to the average reduction in total consumer premiums … [but]
policyholders with high cyclone risk should receive discounts above the average
and policyholders with low cyclone risk will receive smaller discounts.[29]
However, the Taskforce warned that ‘it would be difficult
to ensure that the reduction in insurer costs was fully passed through to
consumers’.[30]
The Royal Commission into Natural Disaster Arrangements
(2020) did not consider reinsurance. It did note that ‘reducing risk by
undertaking mitigation and resilience activities should help lower insurance
costs and premiums’, though large-scale measures (such as the construction of
flood levees) appeared to have greater effect than individual mitigation
investments.[31]
The Royal Commission also recommended that governments consider previous
recommendations to abolish taxes on insurance products.[32]
The ACCC’s Northern Australia Insurance Inquiry (2020)
conducted a comprehensive investigation into home and contents insurance
pricing and its drivers in northern Australia. The ACCC recommended against
reinsurance pools:
We do not consider government reinsurance pools or government
insurers are well-suited to address affordability concerns in a targeted way. …
The potential for government insurers and reinsurance pools to lower premiums
without the government subsidising the insurer in some way is uncertain, and
any premium reductions may not be significant. These measures cannot be
targeted to consumers most in need, and would transfer significant risks from insurers
and reinsurers to governments.[33]
Instead, the ACCC recommended direct premium subsidies as
having ‘the greatest potential to work in a targeted way to relieve some of the
acute insurance affordability and cost of living pressures for households drawn
to live and work in these regions’, also calling for greater consideration of
mitigation and resilience-building measures, which would ‘have significant
benefits now and into the future, including through lower insurance claims
costs’.[34]
The inquiry by the Senate Select Committee (2021) noted
support for a reinsurance pool from several witnesses, but concern or
opposition among others – including the ACCC, the Insurance Council of
Australia (ICA) and Suncorp – about reinsurance schemes’ ‘cost, complexity and
effectiveness’.[35]
The final report made no recommendation one way or the other regarding a
reinsurance pool, however it did recommend increased Australian Government
investment in disaster mitigation.[36]
How does climate change fit in?
The Senate Select Committee (2021) stated that ‘climate
change will continue to increase the risk and associated costs of natural
disasters, particularly in volatile areas such as Northern Australia’.[37]
Similarly, the 2020 Natural Disasters Royal Commission
Final Report noted (unpublished) evidence from the Reserve Bank of Australia
(RBA) that ‘inflation-adjusted insurance claims for natural disasters in the
current decade have been more than double those in the previous decade’
nationally.[38]
The Commission relayed that:
The RBA expects that the insurance industry will be
increasingly exposed to natural hazard risk as the climate changes. The RBA
expects that this impact will grow over time, and may create barriers to
efficiently pricing insurance[.][39]
Although climate change is making natural disaster
insurance more unaffordable generally, there is not a direct link between
climate change and the policy intent of this Bill, as currently drafted.
This is firstly because the understanding and framing of
the policy problem targeted by the Bill has been developed through a northern
Australia lens, rather than broader concern over growing natural disaster risk
(and insurance costs) nationally. Some members of the Australian Government and
stakeholders have referred to the reinsurance pool as the ‘Northern Australia
Reinsurance Pool’[40]
or ‘North Australian Reinsurance Pool’,[41]
reflecting the sustained policy focus on long-standing cost pressures in
northern Australia, from which this Bill evolved. The reason for the decision
to target cyclone insurance specifically was the ACCC’s finding in 2020 that
cyclones are the main cause of the higher insurance premiums charged in
northern Australia.[42]
Secondly, while climate change that has already occurred
may have contributed indirectly to rising cyclone insurance premiums to date,
and while the balance of expectations is that climate change will lead to
higher cyclone costs in future, the pattern is not yet as clear as for other
types of natural disasters.
The ACCC’s 2020 report stated:
We have not seen insurers explicitly adjusting their pricing
models for climate change effects but, they do still take the effects of
climate change into account … because insurers’ models rely on historic data,
which means that to the extent that climate change has affected past weather
patterns, it will implicitly be included in insurers’ prices. … Two insurers
also stated that climate change risk and their associated cost allowances will
be incrementally incorporated into premiums as customers renew their premiums …
[W]e have seen indications that insurers are taking steps to better model the
future effects of climate change. … Another insurer indicated to the ACCC that
there will be increased costs relating to cyclone, storm and flood as a result
of climate change effects, although it also considered that it would ‘take many
years for the impact to become obvious.’[43]
The latest climate modelling on cyclone impacts is less
clear-cut than for floods and bushfires, making it more challenging to
anticipate how its impact on premiums will play out. Floods and fires have
become more frequent and severe, and are expected to become more so[44];
by contrast, the Natural Disasters Royal Commission has reported:
Climate models project a future decrease in the total
number of tropical cyclones, but an increase in their intensity.
However, large natural variability and data limitations make it difficult to
be entirely confident about long-term trends in tropical cyclones. Despite
this, coastal impacts from tropical cyclones are likely to become worse, due to
rising sea levels and increases in cyclone-related extreme rain and wind
events. Additionally, the latitude at which tropical cyclones reach their
maximum lifetime intensity may be shifting poleward (in Australia, towards the
south), and a further movement poleward is possible in future. [emphasis added][45]
The probable trend of fewer but more damaging cyclones is
likely to be re-affirmed in the Australia and New Zealand chapter of the
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) 6th Assessment
Report, whose final draft broadly reflects the above CSIRO advice.[46]
The IPCC draft chapter on Australasia also cites research
published in the scientific journal Nature in 2018 (among others) indicating
that climate change appears to be making cyclones travel more slowly – in
Australia, the speed at which cyclones advance over land has already decreased
by 22 per cent from 1949 to 2016.[47]
This slow-down in ‘translation speed’ is likely to compound the effects of
expected higher rainfall rates during cyclones under climate change, leading to
higher local rainfall totals and flooding; the research cites the example of
Hurricane Harvey, which ‘stalled’ over Texas in 2017 and produced unprecedented
rainfall totals.[48]
If this apparent slowing trend persists, it may have particular implications
for the design of the ‘claims period’ under the Bill and associated
regulations, discussed under ‘Key issues and provisions’.
What is the Australian Reinsurance Pool Corporation (ARPC)?
The ARPC is a corporate Commonwealth entity established by
the Terrorism
Insurance Act in response to a ‘market failure, which occurred
following the terrorist attacks in the United States on September 11, 2001 that
resulted in global reinsurers refusing to underwrite commercial property damage
caused by acts of terror’.[49]
The ARPC was created to fill this gap by administering a reinsurance scheme
backed by a $10 billion Commonwealth guarantee for ‘eligible terrorism losses,
involving commercial property, associated business interruption losses and
public liability’.[50]
Though the Terrorism Insurance Act does not make it mandatory for
insurers to participate in the pool, it compels all insurers to provide full
terrorism cover on eligible policies, with a choice between retaining all the
risk themselves, purchasing reinsurance from the ARPC or purchasing reinsurance
on the private market (which remains scarce and often commercially
unaffordable).[51]
The ARPC charges (reinsurance) premiums to client
insurance companies; these are the source of the ‘pool’ from which the ARPC
meets claims, with the Australian Government guarantee as a back-up should the
pool prove inadequate.[52]
At January 2020, the value of the terrorism reinsurance pool was just under
$14 billion.[53]
To date, there has only been one terrorist incident in the scheme’s history:
the Lindt Café Siege in Sydney in 2014,[54]
which resulted in 92 claims to the ARPC from 20 insurers, totalling $2.3
million.[55]
The ARPC calculates terrorism reinsurance premiums as a percentage
of a client company’s gross base premium,[56]
charging lower premiums for low-risk areas (eg rural areas), intermediate
premiums for medium-risk areas (eg suburban areas) and the highest premiums in
the highest-risk areas (major city CBDs).[57]
On 4 May 2021, the Australian Government announced its
intention to task the ARPC with establishing an additional reinsurance pool for
cyclone and cyclone-related flood damage.[58]
Committee
consideration
Senate Economics Legislation Committee
The Bill was referred to the Senate Economics Legislation
Committee for inquiry and report by 24 March 2022. The Committee received 22
submissions and held a hearing examining the provisions of the Bill on 8 March
2022.[59]
The Committee tabled its report on 24 March 2022 and
recommended that the Bill be passed.[60]
While supporting the Committee’s recommendation, Labor
Senators raised issues with the implementation of the reinsurance pool scheme
and called on the Government to increase funding for disaster mitigation.[61]
Liberal Senator Andrew Bragg also provided additional
comments, focusing on the need to ensure that the scheme was not extended
beyond its intended areas of operation.[62]
In his additional comments, Greens Senator Nick McKim
advised that that Greens would be seeking to amend the Bill in the Senate, and
recommended changes to ensure the scheme would cover all flood damage (not just
from cyclones) and eventually all climatic events, and be funded by a levy on
fossil fuel companies (see also ‘Policy position of non-government
parties/independents’).[63]
Senate Standing Committee for the
Scrutiny of Bills
The Senate Standing Committee for the Scrutiny of Bills had
no comment on the Bill.[64]
Policy
position of non-government parties/independents
Since the Bill was introduced, Members of Parliament on
both sides have expressed growing concern about the fairness of excluding other
types of flooding and other natural disasters from the scheme.
Awareness of the problem of insurance unaffordability for
bushfire and flood-affected communities has been heightened by catastrophic
(and cyclone-unrelated) flooding across south-east Queensland and north-east
New South Wales in late February and early March 2022,[65]
including within the Government.[66]
Longstanding calls for a stronger Government focus on mitigation and
resilience-building in order to future-proof homes and infrastructure against
climate change have also gained attention.
Australian Labor Party
The Australian Labor Party (ALP) has supported passage of
the Bill through the House of Representatives, while raising certain
criticisms.
During the second reading debate on the Bill, the ALP
Member for Kingsford-Smith, Matt Thistlethwaite, stated that the ALP supported
the Bill on the basis of the need to address rising insurance costs and
under-insurance due to climate change.[67]
However, he noted the ACCC’s 2020 recommendation against reinsurance pools as a
preferred policy solution for insurance unaffordability, and criticised the
Government for not acting on the ACCC’s other recommendations.[68]
He also accused the Government of waiting ‘until the dying days of this
parliament to try and ram through this legislation’,[69]
challenged Government figures indicating the potential for very substantial
premium savings[70]
and called for greater investment in mitigation.[71]
In her contribution to the debate
on the Bill, the ALP Member for Macquarie, Susan Templeman, argued that the
Bill should only represent the ‘the start of tackling insurance problems for
places outside northern Australia’.[72]
She called for ‘a much more continent-wide approach’ to this issue.[73]
Ms Templeman noted that in her electorate, ‘the Hawkesbury and Blue
Mountains residents are facing extraordinary increases in insurance costs, to a
point that many cannot afford it, because of the increasing frequency and
severity of fires and floods’.[74]
ALP Members of Parliament have expressed cautious support
for expanding the reinsurance scheme to include all types of flooding, raised
in the aftermath of the February–March 2022 east coast floods, but have
stressed the need for further detail about the scheme from the Government
before committing to support such an expansion, as well as consideration of
broader policy responses to natural disaster risk.[75]
Australian Greens
At the time of writing, the Greens had announced their
intention to amend the Bill in the Senate to expand the scope to cover all
types of flooding, and to fund the scheme through a levy on fossil fuel
companies.[76]
Greens leader Adam Bandt stated:
The scope of the government’s bill is too limited. Damage
from the [record-breaking February–March 2022] floods in QLD and NSW would not
be covered by the government’s legislation as they are not cyclone related
floods. The Greens’ amendments would ensure that the NSW and Qld floods would
be covered, and would keep insurance premiums for people impacted by these
floods lower in the future.[77]
Bandt also called for a statutory review to consider
nationalising reinsurance for all climate-related property damage nationally.[78]
This built on questioning by Greens Senator for Tasmania, Nick McKim, during
the 8 March 2022 public hearing of the Senate Economics Legislation Committee’s
inquiry into the Bill. Senator McKim questioned whether it was equitable to
target premium relief only to people and organisations exposed to cyclone risk,
but not to those exposed to other types of natural disaster risk facing
similarly high premiums:
… people in my home state of Tasmania are cross-subsidising
the insurance cost costs of people in cyclone affected areas. Why is that
equitable and why shouldn't this scheme be extended to cover all weather
related disasters in Australia?[79]
Katter’s Australian Party
The Member for Kennedy, Bob Katter MP, applauded the
introduction of the Bill.[80]
Mr Katter predicted that ‘really the government are providing a reinsurance
pool that they will never need to dip into very much at all, because the houses
that are there now will withstand any cyclone that nature wants to throw at us’
thanks to strengthened building codes (and older properties having already been
destroyed by past cyclones, and replaced with stronger ones).[81]
Position of
major interest groups
Summary
Broadly, the basic model of the reinsurance pool has been
supported by:
- large
insurance companies and peak bodies that commented on the Bill or Exposure
Draft (despite several having opposed reinsurance pools per se in past
inquiries)
-
local councils in northern Australia
-
chambers of commerce and regional development organisations in
northern Australia
-
small business advocates
-
most real estate industry representatives who have commented to
date.
However, while supportive of the scheme in principle, most
stakeholders have also raised substantive concerns about the details.[82]
Issues raised regarding specific provisions in the Bill or associated draft
regulations are addressed under ‘Key issues and provisions’ in this Digest.
Insurance industry
The insurance industry’s position on the idea of a
reinsurance pool has evolved since the idea was first tested during past
inquiries.
Significant industry stakeholders were vigorously opposed
to introducing a reinsurance pool in the context of past inquiries. For
example, Suncorp had previously stated, ‘We are opposed to spending Australian
taxpayers’ money on hiding the problem when we need to be spending the money on
solving the problem by making our communities more resilient’, while the ICA had
said a taxpayer-funded mutual or a reinsurance pool would be an expensive and
unnecessary interference in the market.[83]
The ICA,[84]
along with major insurers including Allianz,[85]
the Insurance Australia Group (IAG),[86]
the Royal Automobile Club of Queensland (RACQ),[87]
and Suncorp,[88]
have now offered qualified support for a reinsurance pool, notwithstanding
concerns about how it will operate.
Allianz, the IAG, ICA and RACQ have
called for an additional focus on mitigation and resilience building as an
urgent priority, within and/or beyond the reinsurance scheme.[89]
The ICA also called for increased funding for mitigation, for resilience
criteria to be incorporated into building codes and for land planning reforms.[90]
Insurers’ call for significant investment in mitigation and resilience has also
been backed by the National Insurance Brokers Association.[91]
The ICA and RACQ also reiterated the need to reform taxes on insurance
products, consistent with the recommendations of previous inquiries.[92]
The industry has also raised concerns about the projected
premium savings for end customers. Prime Minister Scott Morrison said in
May 2021 that he ‘would hope to see at least a 10 per cent fall’ in
premiums under the scheme, ‘and better’, as a ‘conservative’ estimate.[93]
In February 2022, the Government announced that updated modelling showed home-owners
in the most at-risk areas could receive premium savings of up to 46 per cent; owners
of strata properties, up to 58 per cent; and small businesses, up to 34
per cent.[94]
The Government has declined to release substantive details about the modelling
underlying these numbers, claiming public interest immunity; ALP Senator Murray
Watt sharply criticised this decision.[95]
In response to these premium savings projected by the
Government, the ICA, RACQ and Suncorp have all warned that the flow-on impact
on premiums cannot be estimated until after the ARPC determines its pricing
formula for reinsurance premiums, and insurance companies renegotiate their
existing contracts with private market reinsurers.[96]
More concretely, the RACQ’s submission to the Senate Economics Legislation
Committee’s inquiry into the Bill warned that premium reductions of up to
46 per cent would represent ‘a significant reduction for an
initiative that is largely relying on forgoing profit margins to provide
savings’.[97]
The National Insurance Brokers Association’s submission to the Senate Committee
noted that ‘NIBA has previously raised concerns about the level of savings that
the reinsurance pool is expected to provide’ as ‘Reinsurance costs make up a
very small portion of total premiums’:
Whilst savings as high as 50% have been touted by government,
NIBA estimates that the real saving that will be delivered to policyholders is
more in the range of 10-15%. While this saving may provide reprieve to some
consumers for many, the saving delivered will not be sufficient to keep
businesses open and family homes insured.[98]
The ICA’s submission also sought to manage expectations:
Expected premium savings should be understood in commercial
context. Insurers already have reinsurance treaties in place, often with global
reinsurers. Such treaties are typically taken out on a ‘whole of book’ basis,
meaning that Australian insurers are quoted a reinsurance price for all risks
within their portfolio. As the reinsurance pool would cover one particular
risk, insurers will need to negotiate specific carve-outs to avoid paying twice
for the same risk and may lose diversification benefit in doing so. Premium
reductions will therefore be driven by the ability of insurers to capture
savings through commercial re-negotiations. There may not be a direct
pass-through of theoretical savings. For example, a global reinsurer may have
been offering discounted rates on the cyclone risk component of the reinsurance
treaty to secure the overall business, or they may simple have a different
(lower) view of the value of cyclone risk being ceded to the ARPC. In that
circumstance, the insurer may not be able to realise the full theoretical
savings. The precise quantum of premium savings will begin to be seen when
insurers are able to enter the reinsurance pool, in line with the transition
period.[99]
Sure Insurance (a smaller insurance company founded in
2019 specifically to address the insurance needs of regional Queensland) warned
that it expects the scheme, as currently designed, to increase their own
customers’ premiums – unless it is amended to include a ‘no disadvantage
test’ that would allow insurers who can provide cheaper premiums outside the
scheme to continue to do so.[100]
Sure Insurance acknowledged however that this would undermine sustainability
advantages from pooling more expensive, higher risk insurance policies together
with less expensive, lower risk policies for the purposes of the scheme.[101]
The ICA and RACQ raised further concerns with the scheme’s
low predicted regulatory compliance costs of just $440,000 (according to the
Regulation Impact Statement).[102]
The ICA warned the Committee ‘we are concerned that the estimated
implementation costs are unrealistically low’,[103]
while the RACQ advised it believed it would ‘need to spend significantly more
than this amount on its own to get our systems and processes ready to
participate in the pool’.[104]
Northern Australia interest groups
The scheme has strong in principle support among northern
Australia interest groups, though concerns have been raised regarding details.
The Northern Australia Insurance Lobby, representing
insurance buyers in north Queensland, supported the scheme and recommended the
Bill be passed, despite its concerns about the details, as ‘getting something
passed now as a starting point is always better than having nothing passed at
all’.[105]
Its main concern was that the eligibility criteria for the scheme were too
narrow, as discussed under ‘Key issues and provisions’.
The Townsville Chamber of Commerce and Industry and
Regional Development Australia (RDA) Townsville and North West Queensland
commended the introduction of the Bill but wanted additional rules to require
insurers to provide insurance for all of Australia (ie make it illegal for
insurers to refuse to service certain geographical areas), and the creation of
a ‘National Insurer’ to provide a guaranteed minimum baseline of insurance for
all Australians.[106]
Townsville Enterprise Ltd also welcomed the scheme.[107]
The Northern Territory Chamber of Commerce,[108]
the Chamber of Commerce and Industry Queensland,[109]
the Mackay Region Chamber of Commerce,[110]
and the Greater Whitsunday Alliance[111]
offered qualified support for the scheme, while raising concerns about its
operation. The Northern Territory Chamber of Commerce recommended expanding the
scheme to ‘catastrophes Australia-wide’,[112]
noting its ‘concerns that without expanding the pool to be national and
ensuring the appropriate scope, … the predicted savings should be viewed as
optimistic and … not supported by the release of any modelling data’.[113]
The North Queensland Regional Organisation of Councils
welcomed the attention on high insurance costs but expressed the view that the
reinsurance pool ‘should provide reinsurance for all severe weather events that
take place in Northern Australia, including seasonal flooding, storm events,
low pressure events, storm surges and droughts’.[114]
Real estate industry and bodies corporate
The Community Housing Industry
Association,[115]
Property Council of Australia (including its Retirement Living Council
division)[116]
and Real Estate Institute of Queensland[117]
support a reinsurance scheme, although the Community Housing Industry
Association and Property Council of Australia have also raised concerns with
specific eligibility provisions (addressed under ‘Key issues and provisions’).
The Strata Community Association called for the Bill to be passed in its
current form, though it also stressed the importance of mitigation.[118]
By contrast, Scentre Group (ie Westfield) and the Shopping
Centre Council of Australia advocated strongly against the scheme, based on
concerns the Bill may allow for the ARPC’s terrorism reinsurance pool – which
their members have helped build up over many years through premium payments –
to be used to cross-subsidise the cyclone reinsurance pool.[119]
Other stakeholders
The Cyclone Testing Station at James Cook University
warned:
It is important that the pool is not just about making more
premiums more affordable, but acts in a way to improve resilience, and not
making current levels of poor resilience seem acceptable… The objectives [of
the Bill] … are only going to be met if the actual risk is reduced and the only
way to reduce risk is to improve the resilience of buildings, both new and
existing.[120]
While the Government has announced that ‘Over time, the
pool will offer discounts for policies that cover properties that have undertaken
cyclone and flood mitigation’,[121]
this is not incorporated into the Bill or draft regulations.
The Australia Institute argued that the Bill as currently
formulated is inequitable and addresses only a small part of the growing
problem with natural disaster insurance affordability:
the risk of natural disasters is increasing in all parts of
Australia. This was made abundantly clear by the unprecedented Black Summer
bushfires but is also true of flooding not caused by cyclones (that are
currently being experienced and would not be covered by this bill), heatwaves,
drought and coastal inundation. It is deeply inequitable to subsidise insurance
premiums for one region (Northern Australia) for one type of disaster (cyclone
related flooding).[122]
The Australia Institute also questioned whether the scheme
would truly be cost neutral to the Government based on the experience of
government reinsurance schemes in overseas jurisdictions, and argued that if
not, it ‘simply shifts the risk from insurers to taxpayers’.[123]
Financial
implications
The Government considers that the Bill will have no direct
financial impact, as the scheme is ‘designed to be cost-neutral to the
Government over time’.[124]
The ARPC is expected to meet the future cost of claims through the (reinsurance)
premiums it will charge participating insurance companies.
Despite the scheme nominally being cost neutral, it has
the potential to affect the Commonwealth’s fiscal position if the Australian
Government’s $10 billion annual guarantee needs to be called upon to meet
reinsurance claims. In the language of the Explanatory Memorandum, ‘The
guarantee supporting the reinsurance pool is an unquantifiable contingent
liability’.[125]
That is, the scheme will only affect the fiscal or underlying cash balance if
the guarantee is called on, but it is not possible to quantify the potential
impact if that does happen.
Past Treasury modelling provides insight into the
likelihood of a fiscal impact. Treasury’s Northern Australia Insurance
Premiums Taskforce considered a reinsurance pool model very similar to the
one in this Bill, based on a reinsurer that would charge premiums to meet all anticipated
costs, but backed up by an Australian Government guarantee should the pool
created by these premiums prove inadequate.[126]
Based on its modelling at the time, Treasury estimated that if such a
reinsurance pool operated over 10 years, there would be a:
- 50–60 per cent chance that the Government guarantee would be
called on at least once;
- 30–40 per cent chance that the scheme would cost the Government
money when closed (that is outlays under the guarantee would exceed reserves
returned to the Government when the scheme is wound up);
- 10–20 per cent chance that the scheme would, over a 10 year
period, cost the Government more than $2 billion; and
- 5–10 per cent chance that the scheme would, over a 10 year
period, cost the Government more than $5 billion.[127]
Statement of Compatibility with Human Rights
As required under Part 3 of the Human Rights
(Parliamentary Scrutiny) Act 2011, the Government has assessed the
Bill’s compatibility with the human rights and freedoms recognised or declared
in the international instruments listed in section 3 of that Act.[128]
The Government considers that the Bill is compatible and that it ‘engages and
promotes, or may engage and promote, the right to an adequate standard of
living’.[129]
Parliamentary Joint Committee on
Human Rights
The Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights had no
comment on the Bill.[130]
Key issues
and provisions
Establishment of a cyclone and related flood damage
reinsurance pool
Item 9 inserts proposed Part 2A into the Terrorism Insurance
Act 2003 which establishes the legal scope and basic operation of the
cyclone reinsurance pool.
Requirement
to reinsure cyclone risks
Proposed subsection 8A(1) requires ‘general
insurers’ providing cyclone cover under ‘pool insurance contracts’ to take out
reinsurance contracts with the ARPC that completely cover their liability for
all eligible cyclone losses under all such insurance policies.[131]
The scheme would be open from 1 July 2022. The rule would apply even if
insurers have existing private reinsurance contracts.[132]
Item 1 of the Bill amends the Insurance Act
to introduce a civil penalty of 1,000 penalty units ($222,000) for insurers
that are required to take out reinsurance with the ARPC but fail to do so.[133]
Pecuniary penalties may also be imposed on insurers for failing to reinsure
with the ARPC.[134]
Proposed subsections 8A(5) and 8A(6) of the Terrorism
Insurance Act 2003 provide an exemption for small insurers whose total
gross premiums (as reported to the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority
(APRA) during the previous financial year)[135]
from eligible insurance contracts were below a certain dollar threshold, to be
set by regulations. The draft regulations provide a threshold of $10 million.[136]
This exempts insurers with minimum exposure to policies covering eligible
cyclone risks.[137]
However, proposed subsection 8A(8) stipulates that if an exempt
insurer chooses to reinsure some of its cyclone liabilities with the ARPC, it
must reinsure all such liabilities (the ‘one in, all in’ rule).
Proposed subsection 8A(7) allows for the ARPC to
declare exempt geographic areas where cyclone risk will be considered
negligible for the purposes of the participation rules.
Proposed subsections 8A(9) and (10) state
that Lloyd’s underwriters and unauthorised foreign insurers are not required to
participate in the scheme, but may do so voluntarily on the same ‘one in, all
in’ basis as general insurers.
Stakeholder
views
The Business Council of Co-operatives and Mutuals expressed
concerns that ‘by omission, the Bill in its present form excludes discretionary
risk mutuals’ and as a result, ‘discretionary risk mutuals may be inadvertently
displaced from northern Australian markets because they will not be able to
compete on a level playing field with insurers who are able to participate in
the Reinsurance Pool’.[138]
Capricorn Mutual expressed similar concerns and recommended that the Bill be
amended to include mutual and mutual risk products or to permit indirect
reinsurance of mutuals.[139]
Treasury has confirmed that ‘in the current construction
of the legislation, they [Capricorn Mutual] would not be included in the policy
setting’, explaining that discretionary risk protection is ‘not an insurance
product’, and that an expanded scheme incorporating discretionary risk mutuals
would be ‘a very different product’.[140]
Treasury flagged possible future work on this issue.
Meaning of
‘pool insurance contracts’
A ‘pool insurance contract’ refers to the types of
insurance policies that will be eligible for cyclone risk reinsurance with the
ARPC.
An insurance policy is a ‘pool insurance contract’ to the
extent that it:
-
provides insurance cover of a kind specified in proposed
subsection 8B(2) and 8B(3) or
-
is prescribed by the regulations.[141]
The Explanatory Memorandum notes that the
regulation-making power is required ‘to ensure the Government can make timely
changes’ with respect to ‘the scope of the cyclone reinsurance scheme’, and the
regulations will be disallowable instruments.[142]
Proposed subsection 8B(2) effectively
restricts pool insurance contracts to policies covering property loss/damage
and, in the case of businesses, business interruption and consequential loss
arising from property loss/damage or the inability to use property owned or
occupied by the insured (eg leased business premises).
Proposed subsection 8B(3) further restricts
the definition to policies covering three principle categories of risks:
-
insurance policies for ‘home building’ and/or ‘contents’
insurance[143]
- insurance
policies for ‘building’ and/or contents insurance held by the body corporate for
a strata or community title development where at least 50% of the total floor
space is used for residential purposes[144]
and
- non-residential
building and/or contents insurance policies up to a threshold value to be set
by regulations (the ‘sum insured’ test).[145]
The draft regulations specify a threshold of $5 million
for eligible non-residential insurance policies,[146]
with the intention to provide cover for small businesses, not-for-profits,
community organisations and similar entities.[147]
The Bill provides that the terms ‘building, ‘contents’ and ‘home building’ will
be defined in the regulations.[148]
Proposed subsections 8B(5)–(9) list exemptions to
the above criteria.
For example, proposed subsection
8B(6) has the effect of barring reinsurance for the residential property
component of a larger mixed residential and non-residential insurance policy if
the total sum insured under the non-residential coverage is more than the
threshold (as set in the regulations). For example, if the threshold was set at
$5 million and an insurance policy provided $5.1 million in non-residential
property cover to a business owner, plus cover for a residential flat above a
shop, the entire policy (including the residential component) is not eligible
for pool coverage, even if the residential component would have been
eligible if it were in the form of a standalone home insurance contract, or if
the value of the non-residential coverage was only $4.9 million.
Proposed subsection 8B(7) contains further
exclusions, most notably paragraph 8B(7)(b), which excludes non-residential
insurance for farms and farm businesses of any size. The portion of an
insurance policy covering a family home located on a farm and its contents
would be eligible for reinsurance under the scheme, but nothing else. There are
explicit exclusions for insurance covering businesses producing crops,
livestock or produce derived from crops/livestock and any on-site processing or
manufacturing using farm produce, including property used in these operations.[149]
Stakeholder
views
Many interest groups have raised concerns about the
implications of the proposed eligibility criteria for tourist accommodation
property, aged care and retirement facilities, and small businesses.
For example, the Northern Australia Insurance Lobby (NAIL)
warned these provisions would exclude many ‘mum and dad’ investment properties
(apartments) in module buildings under strata title used for short-term tourist
accommodation (AirBNBs and other short-term holiday rentals), because the Bill
treats such properties as non-residential.[150]
NAIL argues that many such strata complexes would exceed the sum insured test,
precluding any benefit to the owners from the scheme.[151]
NAIL has argued this will reduce the scheme’s ability to effect premium relief
in tourism hotspots, particularly on Hamilton Island.[152]
Retirement homes and aged care facilities are also treated
as commercial property for the purposes of the Bill, and as such they are also
subject to the proposed ‘sum insured’ limit. NAIL and the Property Council of
Australia have raised concerns that as aged care providers pass on higher
insurance costs to their clients, the exclusion of any retirement village or
nursing home portfolio insured for more than the ‘sum insured limit’ will mean
there is no pass-through of benefit to residents.[153]
The National Insurance Brokers Association also raised this concern, noting
that the ‘sum insured’ test applies regardless of whether the facility is run on
a commercial basis or as a not-for-profit/community organisation.[154]
By contrast, the Community Housing Industry Association
has called for an explicit provision that social/affordable rental housing be
considered ‘business premises’ for the purposes of the Bill, to ensure such
housing providers can participate at all.[155]
It also raised the need to clarify whether Aboriginal Shire Councils that serve
as Indigenous Community Housing Organisations would be covered by the scheme.[156]
Stakeholders have raised concerns as to whether the
proposed $5 million sum insured threshold in the draft regulations is too
restrictive. Allianz had previously called for a $15 million sum insured
threshold.[157]
NAIL had called for a $10 million to $20 million threshold.[158]
However, Allianz now supports the $5 million test,[159]
and NAIL supports passing the Bill in its current form but calls for monitoring
of the operation of the $5 million threshold in future reviews of the amended Act.[160]
The Australian Small Business and Family Enterprise
Ombudsman also flagged concerns the sum insured threshold was too low.[161]
The ICA further warned in its December 2021 submission to Treasury
of the ‘potential for gaming by policyholders who may split their policies as
well as the incentive for under-insurance where policyholders may seek to
utilise the eligibility threshold for the pool’.[162]
In addition, the RACQ has called for the inclusion of
motor vehicle insurance (on the rationale that this will simplify
implementation for participating insurers),[163]
and the Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman has called for the
immediate inclusion of marine assets (noting however that the Government has
announced that coverage for small business marine property insurance policies
will be included from 1 July 2023).[164]
In its submission to Treasury, the Queensland Farmers
Federation (QFF) welcomed the proposed reinsurance pool but objected to the
exclusion of almost all farm assets.[165]
The QFF requested that the Government explain and review the exclusion and
advise on when farm assets could be included in the future.[166]
The QFF’s submission also drew attention to the potential of mutuals to better
meet farmers’ insurance needs[167];
however, as discussed above, discretionary mutual funds would be precluded from
participating in the scheme.
An insurance broker who submitted to the Senate inquiry
into the Bill argued that the specific exclusion of farmers’ business assets
introduced an arbitrary inequity:
many farmers have extensive investments in substantial
Machinery sheds. They can also have expensive plant for example on-farm produce
processing and packing equipment, cold rooms etc. If these buildings were
located in a township’s industrial estate the building and nonmobile contents
would be eligible up to the current $5 Million[.][168]
Setting
insurance premiums for cyclone reinsurance contracts
Proposed section 8D sets out the principles the
ARPC must follow when setting premiums to be paid by insurance companies for
cyclone reinsurance contracts with the ARPC.
Proposed paragraph 8D(a) requires the ARPC to seek
to charge premiums sufficient, over the long term, to cover ‘or offset’ claims
pay-outs and its operating expenses.
The wording of this requirement is weaker than a
requirement to achieve cost neutrality to the Australian Government in the long
run. The requirement for the ARPC to only ‘offset’ costs is consistent with
past Treasury modelling indicating a 30 to 40 per cent probability that a
reinsurance scheme following the same cost recovery principles as the current
proposal would fail to recover all its costs over a 10-year operating period.[169]
Proposed paragraph 8D(b) requires the ARPC to set
premiums (for reinsurance contracts) for policyholders at risk of medium to
high levels of exposure to eligible cyclone losses as low as possible while
maintaining incentives to reduce and mitigate the risk. The intention is that
more heavily discounted reinsurance costs in medium to high risk areas will
flow through to greater reductions in premiums for policyholders in that area.
Proposed paragraph 8D(c) requires the
ARPC to set reinsurance premiums for policyholders at low risk of exposure to
eligible cyclones losses at comparable levels to those offered on the private
market.
Separately from the Bill and draft regulations, the
Government has tasked the ACCC with undertaking price monitoring to assess
whether savings to insurers through reduced reinsurance costs are passed on to
end-consumers as premium reductions.[170]
The Government has also announced that the pool will cover all eligible claims
above the policyholder’s excess for the first three years. Then the pool will
operate on a risk-sharing arrangement with insurers, to allow a staged
transition to a limited level of risk retention by the insurers.[171]
Stakeholder
views
Stakeholders have raised concerns about the feasibility
and equity of this model (also discussed above under ‘Policy position of
non-government parties/independents’ and ‘Position of major interest groups’).
The Cyclone Testing Station at James Cook University
further warned of moral hazard, stating that ‘The concept of providing higher
discounts for higher risk properties … may work against the aim of encouraging
owners of less resilient properties to undertake mitigation recommendations’.[172]
The Australia Institute similarly warned that this feature of the Bill
‘encourages maladaptation … If the bill does result in lower insurance premiums
for insurance buyers, it will exacerbate the problem by encouraging people to
live in disaster prone areas, almost inevitably leading to more property
damage, injuries and fatalities’.[173]
The ACCC had also previously raised concerns about whether
such a model could target those most genuinely in need:
the beneficiaries of lower reinsurance costs may not be those
consumers who are facing the most acute premium pressures. High-risk
policyholders that can benefit from a pool or scheme may range across a wide
socio-economic spectrum as it would be difficult for insurers to reinsure
properties differently based on the customers’ incomes. At one end of the
spectrum are people of low socio-economic means, who do not have the capacity
to move to less risky locations or afford higher premiums. At the other end are
those who have the socio-economic means, but who by choice live in desirable
but highly risk-exposed areas.[174]
Eligible
cyclone loss
Proposed section 8C specifies that losses must arise
from either:
-
a declared cyclone event under proposed subsection 8F(1)
or
- damage
by wind, rain, rainwater or rainwater runoff, storm surge or flood caused by
that weather system (without limiting generality).
The loss must commence before the end of the associated ‘claims
period’ (see below), though it may continue beyond the end of the claims
period.[175]
Proposed subsection 8E(1) requires the BoM to
notify the ARPC when it determines that a cyclone exists (or has
re-intensified) that has potential to affect any part of Australia. The BoM
must also notify the ARPC when a cyclone ends.[176]
It must make these notifications as soon as possible, and within 24 hours at
the latest.[177]
The Bill provides that the term ‘cyclone’ and the ‘end’ of a cyclone will be
defined by the regulations.[178]
The current definition of a ‘cyclone’ in the draft Regulations is modelled on
tropical cyclones.[179]
Proposed section 8F covers the ARPC’s
responsibility for declaring a ‘cyclone event’ and the associated claims period
for the purposes of reinsurance contract liabilities under the Bill. Proposed
subsection 8F(1) requires the ARPC to declare the start of a cyclone
event and the start of the associated claims period based on the date and time
provided by the BoM (under proposed section 8E). Proposed
subsection 8F(2) similarly requires the ARPC to declare the end of
the cyclone event according to the BoM’s notification of when the cyclone
‘ended’ (i.e. when it was downgraded), and declare when the associated claims
period ended, or will end. Proposed subsection 8F(3) states that
regulations will determine how long the claims period extends after a cyclone
‘ends’, with the current draft regulations specifying 48 hours.[180]
Proposed subsection 8F(4) requires ARPC cyclone
event and claims period declarations to be made as soon as practicable (within
24 hours of the relevant BoM notification, at the latest) by notifiable
instrument and published online, and states that these declarations cannot be
varied or revoked. If a cyclone was downgraded, leading the ARPC to declare the
end of a cyclone event, but then reintensifies, this would trigger the
declaration of a new cyclone event.[181]
Proposed subsection 8F(5) states that declarations
will be valid even if they contain errors and do not comply with the
requirements discussed above. In conjunction with proposed paragraph
8F(4)(c) stating that declarations cannot be varied or revoked once made,
this may have potential to cause unfair outcomes if mistakes are made, and reinsurance
claims that should, in fact, be eligible are legally rendered ineligible, and
vice versa, though this has not been raised as a concern by stakeholders.
Stakeholder
views
Stakeholders were particularly concerned with the strict,
externally regulated 48-hour window after the end of a cyclone within which
claimable damage must occur, noting that it would:
- require
a significant change to current insurance business practices and increase the
obstacles to a smooth renegotiation of existing reinsurance contracts, as well
as being difficult to enforce[182]
and
- exclude
potentially very significant damage before a severe storm is first upgraded to
a named cyclone and in the days after it is downgraded, of particular relevance
for cyclone-related flooding.[183]
The RACQ described the ‘claims period’ as defined in the
Bill as ‘the main cause of the pool’s complexity and uncertainty’.[184]
In its evidence to the Senate Economics Committee, the RACQ explained that standard
practice in the reinsurance industry is for reinsurance contracts to cover a
168 hour or one week period whose specific timing is determined by the
insurer, to ensure coverage of the largest possible number of claims.[185]
The RACQ warned:
By allowing the BoM, via the ARPC, to make the start and end
date determination, it is made purely on meteorological terms and the choice of
date of loss is taken away from the insurer. The claims period, as it is
defined, is not an approach adopted by the global market and so its alignment
with typical reinsurance treaties is yet to be properly tested. Any cover
uncertainty or duplication will impact on member benefits.[186]
The RACQ also presented evidence that a large quantum of
damage from cyclone events would likely be ineligible for ARPC reinsurance
under this rule:
RACQ recently completed an analysis of Australia’s history of
cyclones over the past 40 years. During that time, the Bureau of Meteorology
declared 226 tropical cyclones that approached or crossed Australia’s
coastline. When applying the claims period over the cyclones’ timelines and
trajectories, we have determined that almost 50 per cent or 112 of these
cyclones would experience a gap in pool coverage before or after the defined
claims period. Some of these cyclones may not have been covered at all. …
Cyclone Oswald … was only a category one cyclone in 2013. However, it was a
slow-moving system that brought incredible storm-related damage costing
approximately $100 million in damage and loss to RACQ member property and
possessions, in today’s terms. … Because ex-TC Oswald caused most of its damage
after the 48-hour period down Queensland’s coastline, the pool would have
covered virtually none of RACQ members’ losses. … A “pre-cyclone” system could
cause significant flooding or storm surge. … A homeowner who is impacted by a
system either shortly before a cyclone is declared, or after a cyclone is
downgraded, is unlikely to appreciate such nuances and semantics and is likely
to expect the pool to respond to their situation.[187]
Though not discussed by the RACQ, current climate
modelling projects that cyclones may become more slow-moving as climate change
progresses (see page 11 of Digest).[188]
If this projection is realised, this rule may see an increasing problem of ‘under-reinsurance’
for cyclone-related damage occurring before or after the cyclonic phase of
slow-moving severe storm systems.
Source: RACQ, Submission
to the Senate Economic Legislation Committee, Inquiry into the Treasury Laws
Amendment (Cyclone and Flood Damage Reinsurance Pool) Bill 2022, March
2022, 6.
Commonwealth guarantee for payments under cyclone
reinsurance contracts
Item 19 of the Bill introduces proposed section
35A, which provides that the Commonwealth guarantees the ARPC’s cyclone
reinsurance contract liabilities, up to a limit of $10 billion per financial
year unless the Minister authorises a higher amount by notifiable instrument.
The ARPC must notify the Minister if it considers it likely that $10 billion
will not be sufficient, in which case the Minister must consult with the
Treasurer (if the Minister is not the Treasurer), Prime Minister and Finance
Minister to determine what amount will be sufficient.[189]
Ministerial determinations cannot be revoked and a
unilateral determination made by the Minister will be valid even if the
Minister has not consulted with the Treasurer, Prime Minister and Finance
Minister.[190]
This raises concerns that decisions with potentially very significant fiscal
impacts will be left to ministerial discretion without oversight by either the
Parliament or senior members of the Executive.
Other provisions
Changes to ARPC governance arrangements
Items 12 to 15 propose more robust
governance requirements for the ARPC, commensurate with the significantly
expanded role envisaged by the Bill. Historically, the ARPC has only been
called on once to fulfill its reinsurance contracts in the case of terrorist
acts (following the Lindt café siege). Cyclones, by contrast, are expected to
continue to be regular occurrences in northern Australia, and the Bill will
require additional actuarial oversight of the ARPC and other governance
enhancements to enable it to administer the cyclone reinsurance pool.
Item 14 introduces a new power for the Minister to
appoint a representative of APRA and a representative of the Australian
Government Actuary (AGA) as part-time observers (though the Minister can choose
to appoint only one observer) provided the Minister is satisfied they have the
relevant qualifications or experience.[191]
Observers may attend meetings, take part in proceedings and report back to the
Minister but cannot vote on matters.[192]
Observers can be appointed for a period of up to 2 years and the Minister may
terminate the appointment of an observer at any time.[193]
Item 15 inserts a requirement for the ARPC to
nominate a ‘reviewing actuary’ who is a Fellow of the Institute of Actuaries of
Australia.[194]
The reviewing actuary cannot be an employee or a consultant engaged by the
ARPC.[195]
For the first 3 years of the scheme, the ARPC must nominate the AGA as the
inaugural reviewing actuary.[196]
The reviewing actuary’s role will be to review premiums set by the ARPC in the
context of the requirements set out in proposed section 8D,
review ARPC Financial Outlook Reports and provide advice on actuarial matters
as requested by the ARPC.[197]
The reviewing actuary must notify the ARPC of any significant concerns about
the scheme’s financial sustainability or the ARPC’s risk management processes.[198]
Item 26 inserts proposed section 40A which
requires the ARPC to deliver a Financial Outlook Report to the Minister at the
end of each financial year, covering matters to be set out in the regulations.[199]
The report must also be published online within 10 days of delivery to the
Minister.[200]
Item 26 also repeals and replaces section 41 to
amend the current requirements for reviewing the operation of the Terrorism Insurance
Act. Proposed section 41 will require the Minister to review the
future operation of the amended Act in mid-2025 and every 5 years thereafter.
However, the Government has committed to an earlier ministerial review 12
months after commencement, and this has been supported by stakeholders.[201]
Application
provisions
Part 2 of the Bill (comprising items 27 to 30)
clarifies when and how aspects of the amendments will apply. The most
substantive item is item 27, which states that small insurers (with
total gross written premiums of less than $300 million) that are required to
participate in the scheme must be subscribed by the start of the 2025 calendar
year, and large insurers must be subscribed by the start of the 2024 calendar
year.
Concluding
comments
The Bill gives effect to the Government’s commitment to
establish a reinsurance pool for damages arising from cyclones and related
flooding, to address long-standing concerns about high insurance premiums in
northern Australia.
There is broad support for the reinsurance scheme in
principle, however many stakeholders have expressed uncertainty as to whether
the scheme can achieve the premium savings projected by the Government, and
raised concerns about key operational details. Other stakeholders have raised
overarching concerns about the scheme’s scope and fairness, and the right
balance between providing immediate premium relief and encouraging actual risk
reduction.
These factors make it likely that stakeholders will
sustain pressure on the Government to make further amendments in the coming
months and years; in particular, to expand the reinsurance scheme beyond its
current remit to address equity concerns in the context of increasingly
widespread natural disasters due to climate change.