The "Gladstone line" is likely to move further south after the catastrophic floods.
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The Gladstone line is an imaginary line, north of which it is harder to get insurance at what was hitherto a reasonable price - or it is impossible to get it at all.
The moving of the Gladstone line south will cause the Morrison government a few headaches. Helping out will be a tacit acceptance that adaptation to global heating is necessary, but doing nothing (a favourite Morrison option) could cost a lot of votes.
Millions of people in metro Brisbane and Sydney and dozens of flood-affected towns - whose wages have hardly moved for years and who are facing higher prices induced by COVID and flood attacks on supply chains - are not going to be happy when they get their insurance renewal notice.
However, the cost of helping them is so high it will also mean a tacit acceptance that a decade of world climate negligence has its price.
Let's go back to the Gladstone line. Since a series of cyclones and related floods hit north Queensland starting with Yasi in 2011, insurers have almost doubled premiums for house insurance. Many insurers will not insure boats moored north of Gladstone at all, or the premiums are so high (5 per cent of value or more) that the insurer is essentially factoring in that the boat will likely be destroyed sometime within the next 20 years.
They will insure for public liability and third-party property damage, because cyclones do not generate these sorts of claims.
In general, insurers like to be the Good Samaritan turning up to one-off catastrophes. But they hate widespread natural disasters. They are in business, after all, so they have to either refuse to insure against certain risks or price them heavily.
People often misguidedly think they are insuring a house, car or boat. Not so. They are insuring against a set of defined events causing loss or damage to the house, car or boat.
As no doubt the owners of shelled apartments in Kyiv are finding out, losses through acts of war, for example, are not covered.
In Australia, a lot of insurers offer cheaper premiums if flood is excluded, especially in areas where local councils have been stupid enough to allow building in low-lying areas.
Insurers look at the risk postcode by postcode, suburb by suburb. The difference in premiums between far north Queensland and the rest of Australia is truly astonishing. But it is based on the risk. No sane insurance company would seek to gain extra market share by lowering premiums, because they would expose themselves to bankruptcy in the event of a widespread disaster.
More importantly, to ameliorate the risk they have to take out reinsurance, which they can draw upon if disaster strikes. That costs money, and that price increase has to be passed on to consumers.
The far north position got electorally sensitive. People were outraged at rising premiums, and there are a lot of marginal seats down the coast of Queensland. So in May last year, the federal government announced that it would underwrite reinsurance to the tune of $10 billion in northern Australia. The scheme would begin on July 1, 2022.
It was a classic Morrison government "announceable". If there is voter agitation, the government must be seen to be doing something now, even if the actual doing is postponed. Moreover, it was a classic example of the Morrison government giving help to the private sector (insurance companies) to deal with what should be a whole-of-community problem.
So, what happens when the Gladstone line moves - with the changing climate - south, to perhaps as far as the Prime Minister's own electorate in the south of Sydney?
In addition to the throngs of unhappy home owners mentioned above, small businesses will be similarly affected.
This a far greater problem than that of the far north. A reinsurance fund of just $10 billion will not cut it. But the newly flooded will inevitably ask: if the government can help the North, why can't it help us?
Climate change means hundreds of thousands of dwellings and businesses are now in floodplains that did not exist before. Moreover, population pressure brought on by rampant increases in immigration from the time of the Howard government has put pressure on local governments to allow development in places that are susceptible to flooding.
Pardon the pun, but we are at a watershed here. Do we do what we did in 2011 and 2017 and allow people to rebuild their flooded homes and businesses, only to see them flooded yet again? Do we watch while councils and state governments rebuild flooded infrastructure rather than relocating it or building it back in a way that is more floodproof?
More importantly, the danger here is that a whole lot of decisions by individual people, businesses and councils, unless checked, will determine what happens.
In the long run we all pay in varying shares for flood damage - either through higher insurance premiums or through taxes to pay for aid to victims and to pay for infrastructure rebuilds.
Further, continuing with the existing model will result in a vicious cycle. Big flood events cause big insurance payouts, which cause big rises in premiums, which in turn cause people to risk not insuring - especially those on low incomes - so the public burden becomes higher.
An intelligent government would ask: what is the point of rebuilding these homes, only to see them all destroyed sometime in the next decade?
Wouldn't it be better to have a national effort at redrawing flood maps, helping people relocate, and reducing the population pressures on our towns and cities which encourage developers to build where they should not?
But that would require an acknowledgment that the climate has changed for the worse, as well as the intelligence to undertake something beyond mere Band-Aid repairs - which no Australian government has been prepared to do for the past decade.
- Crispin Hull is a former editor of The Canberra Times and a regular columnist. crispinhull.com.au