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The Influence of Climate on Fire Damage

Hans Andersson

ASTIN Bulletin, 1963, vol. 2, issue 3, 345-351

Abstract: In his paper “Actuarial Activity in General Insurance in the Northern Countries of Europe” L. Wilhelmsen gives amongst other things an account of the work carried on by Centralstället för nordisk ömsesidig Brandförsäkringsstatistik (CNÖB, the Northern Central Office for Fire Insurance Statistics from Mutual Companies). In this he states that one part of the organisation's work is the carrying out of special investigations of current problems with material collected on each occasion for the purpose.The object of this paper is to report investigations carried out in CNÖB on the connection between temperature and risk premium in fire insurance. The material used is made up exclusively of civil risks (buildings) and the material has been taken from Sweden and Norway. The background to the investigation consists in the fact that in Scandinavia the risk premiums for fire insurance show an apparent geographical variation, in that the amount clearly increases in the most northerly provinces.As we know that the fire damage directly or indirectly caused by heating systems (chimney fires, cracked building blocks, embers from fireplaces or chimneys etc.) represents a large proportion of the damage in civil risks (40-50%, in some materials 60% or more), that the proportion is greatest in the northern parts and that in the Swedish material about 50% of the damage in any one area falls in the four months December to March, it is quite reasonable to trace the influence of the temperature factor behind the geographical variation; the colder the climate, the more lighting of fires and the more damage. This line of argument is connected exclusively to the frequency of damage; we shall return later to the mean degree of damage.

Date: 1963
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