Weather and Natural Disasters

U.S. insurers on hook for billions in Texas storm, state regulator collecting data on costs

Key Points
  • With billions of dollars in damage expected from the historic Texas winter storm, a state regulator plans to collect data from property insurers to assess costs stemming from a crippled electrical grid, roofing collapses, broken pipes, and other problems, a spokesman said on Friday.
  • The process, set to begin in the coming weeks, comes as one firm that models catastrophe risk estimated an $18 billion tab for property insurers.
Residents line up in their vehicles to enter a warming center and shelter after record-breaking winter temperatures, as local media reports most residents are without electricity, in Galveston, Texas, U.S., February 17, 2021.
Adrees Latif | Reuters

With billions of dollars in damage expected from the historic Texas winter storm, a state regulator plans to collect data from property insurers to assess costs stemming from a crippled electrical grid, roofing collapses, broken pipes, and other problems, a spokesman said on Friday.

"We expect this to be a large event, but we just don't know how large it will be," said Texas Department of Insurance spokesman Ben Gonzalez, noting that the data inquiry mirrors the regulator's process after other major storms, such as hurricanes.

The process, set to begin in the coming weeks, comes as one firm that models catastrophe risk estimated an $18 billion tab for property insurers.

The estimate, by Karen Clark & Co, a Boston firm whose software helps insurers to predict their catastrophe losses, is for property damage in Texas and other states, a spokesman said.

Bitter cold weather and snow have paralyzed Texas since Sunday, shutting down much of the state's electricity grid and freezing pipes and waterways, leaving communities across the state either without water altogether or forced to boil it for safety.

Texas Governor Greg Abbott confirmed that all power-generating plants were online as of Thursday afternoon. He urged lawmakers to pass legislation to ensure the grid was prepared for cold weather in the future.

Texas insurers expect "hundreds of thousands of claims" said Camille Garcia, Insurance Council of Texas spokeswoman on Thursday.

"That could be anything from small fender benders to significant home damage because of burst pipes, and everything in between," Garcia said.