The Counterfactual Built from Routine Claims
The Sun paper's central analytical move is a counterfactual. It assumes that catastrophic weather-related claims (floods, wildfires, severe storms, major perils) and non-catastrophic routine claims (burst pipes, theft, minor accidents) are subject to the same underlying inflation, construction-cost, and economic drivers. Only catastrophic losses, the paper argues, are significantly intensified by worsening climate hazards.
If that assumption holds, routine claims become a usable baseline — they're the trend line home insurance loss costs would have followed without escalating extreme weather. The gap between catastrophic and routine trends (11.9% vs 1.97% annual growth) is then interpreted as the climate-driven component. About two-thirds of that gap is attributed to climate directly; the remaining third is allocated to drivers like urban growth and aging infrastructure.
This is the load-bearing assumption. Move it and the 54.5% climate share moves with it. The strength of the methodology is that the assumption is transparent, testable, and reasonable on its face. The weakness is that it's not bulletproof — and readers should understand exactly where it could give.
Where the Counterfactual Strains
The assumption that routine claims have no climate exposure is mostly defensible but has real edges:
- Freeze-thaw cycles. Burst-pipe claims, classed as routine, are partly driven by freeze-thaw frequency — which is itself shifting under a changing climate. A material climate effect on routine claims would mechanically inflate the baseline and shrink the inferred climate share. The paper doesn't engage with this specifically.
- Roof failure thresholds. Wind, hail, and ice events that would once have been near-misses are increasingly producing claims that look "routine" at the policy level (a single tile, a small leak) but reflect climate-driven changes in event frequency. Where insurers code these matters for the partition.
- The two-thirds attribution split. Of the gap between catastrophic and routine claim growth, two-thirds is attributed to climate and one-third to non-climate drivers. The split is reasoned but not derived from a separate empirical model — it's a defensible allocation, not a measurement.
- The model assumes a clean partition. Real insurance loss data is messier than the catastrophic-vs-routine binary the model relies on. Aggregating claims into those two buckets requires coding judgments that affect the underlying growth rates.
None of these strains invalidate the central finding. They do mean the 54.5% climate share is best read as a calibrated central estimate from a defensible method, not a precise measurement. A different reasonable researcher applying a different reasonable partition would land at a different number — probably in the same neighbourhood, but not identical.
The Sun paper deserves credit for being explicit about its assumptions in a way that most insurance-industry research is not. The point of pressure-testing the methodology isn't to dismiss the finding; it's to give readers the calibration they need to interpret it correctly.