Home insurance harder to get, more expensive in southern Rhode Island
The nation’s largest home and auto insurance companies say
we can trust them, but lately they’re behaving far more like villains than
heroes.The percentage of non-renewals in Rhode Island
doubled between 2018 and 2023, the worst in New England.
Source: In Vulnerable Areas, Climate Risk Drives
Home Insurance Non-Renewals, Not Just Rate Hikes | Insurify
As the climate crisis intensifies, big insurance companies
are protecting their bottom line instead of policyholders. They’re canceling
policies, raising rates, and refusing to cover claims after major disasters —
all while making huge profits from the causes of climate chaos.
Climate disaster damage in the United States has steadily
increased, with costs totaling $187
billion in 2024. Yet instead of covering their customers, big
insurance is abandoning them.
State
Farm and Allstate have
stopped accepting applications for home insurance in California, while Farmers pulled
out of Florida and AIG curtailed
sales in 200 zip codes across the country.
All told, insurers have dropped over
1.9 million home insurance policies nationwide since 2018, a congressional
investigation found.
Elsewhere, big insurance is raising rates dramatically. Home
insurance premiums have risen by over 40 percent across the United States over
the past six years, according to Lending
Tree. This year alone, State Farm raised
rates 17 percent in California and 27
percent in Illinois.
Even as they raise rates, the same companies are
facing mounting
complaints for not paying claims months after a major disaster — when
they’re needed the most.
State Farm is under
investigation in California after hundreds
of Eaton Fire survivors complained about delay and denial. “Trying to
get them to answer our inquiries and reimburse for alternative living expenses
is taking all my time and energy,” said one survivor who lost their home in
January. “It should never be this difficult.”
In fact, major insurers are fueling the very climate crisis
that’s destroying people’s homes.
Large insurance companies are also large institutional
investors, investing their profits in stocks and bonds — including in the
fossil fuel industry. Last year, the property insurance industry made $25.4
billion from underwriting, but $164.3 billion — over six times as much —
from investments and capital gains, an analysis from Revolving
Door Project found.
Even as the climate crisis renders much of the country
uninsurable, the property insurance industry had $582
billion invested in fossil fuel companies driving the climate crisis
in 2019, the most recent year for which aggregate data is available.
As of May 2024, State Farm had $20.6 billion invested in fossil fuels, according to the German nonprofit Urgewald. USAA, AIG, Nationwide, Allstate, Travelers, Liberty Mutual, and The Hartford have all sunk billions into fossil fuels. By far the largest investor is Berkshire Hathaway, parent of Geico and General, with over $95 billion in fossil fuels — it’s actually the top investor in Chevron.
The resulting profits ballooned insurance executive
compensation packages by 30 percent last year. Forty-two top
executives at nine major insurance companies took home a total of $310 million,
with Allstate CEO Thomas Wilson alone making $26.1 million.
By canceling policies, raising rates, not paying claims, and
investing in climate chaos, big home and auto insurance companies have revealed
themselves to be anything but heroic.
Fortunately, they’ve never been our only option.
Local and regional insurance companies may not be household
names, but they’re the real deal. They understand the needs of the people they
insure and are often part of the communities they serve. These companies are
just as financially sound as the big guys. Many have been serving their
communities for decades.
Best of all, switching to a local or regional insurance
company could save you money, since they don’t have multimillion-dollar
advertising budgets.
Don’t know where to start? Green America, my organization,
offers a Climate
Smart Insurance Directory. It lists local and regional insurance companies
in every state that invest little to nothing in the fossil fuel industry and
have a rating of A- or above from AM Best. Find it at GreenAmerica.org.
We deserve better than villains investing in the same
dangers they say they’ll protect us from. Buying local home and auto insurance
may just help you find the real hometown hero you need.
Cathy Cowan Becker is the Responsible Finance Campaigns Director at Green America. This op-ed was distributed by OtherWords.org.