The Handsomest Fox In The Henhouse

Guest Post by Willis Eschenbach

Well, we had the Senate hearing on the climate. Dr. Roy Spencer and Dr. Roger Pielke gave excellent talks. There’s a discussion of it here on WUWT  and Dr. Judith Curry has a post on it at her blog.

I wanted to discuss the silver fox in the science house, the testimony of Mr. Frank Nutter, Esq. He represented the insurance and reinsurance industries, and presented their recommendations with an insurance company’s usual honesty and plain square dealing, combined with a lawyer’s well-known transparency and clarity.

Mr. Nutter’s bio from when he was a Moderator for an AGU conference includes …

Mr. Nutter currently serves on the Board of the International Hurricane Research Center … He recently served on the Council of the American Meteorological Society; the Board of the University Center for Atmospheric Research, a consortium of universities managing the National Center for Atmospheric Research sponsored by the National Science Foundation; and the Board of the Bermuda Institute for Ocean Sciences.

frank nutter

When I read that, I thought dang, they got an insurance guy who is actually a climate scientist? That’s a surprise. So I wondered, what are his qualifications for being on all of those climate-related boards?

Well … it turns out he has a law degree, which his bio spells out in full, a “Juris Doctorate”. And he has a winning smile. And presumably lots of money.

In any case, Mr. Nutter Esq. put a bunch of insurance company recommendations before the good Congresspersonages, and I busted out laughing when I read the first one.

Congressional Action

As Congress considers the impact of climate change, the RAA [Reinsurance Association of America] suggests the following legislative principles or actions to consider:

Provide tax credits to individuals for specified mitigation and resiliency actions associated with extreme weather and climate change.

Now, what’s not to like in that? He’s interested in adaptation to evil CO2, and not in a carbon tax to mitigate CO2. He wants to upgrade our infrastructure to make America less vulnerable to the oft-rumored climate catastrophe, strengthen our resiliency and ability to weather the oft-foretold and oft-delayed climate catastrophe, or even just do a better job of surviving the next big storm … you almost want to congratulate him for his community spirit.

Almost …

Here’s the deal with insurance companies. They are in business to make money, and more power to them—insurance is a needed and useful service, and if they can’t make a profit everyone suffers. However, we need to keep in mind a few very important things.

The first one is that the more that people are scared of the future, the more insurance they will buy. So as you might imagine, the insurance companies have been the allies of climate alarmists from day one. Munich Re has been strongly pro-alarm since the early days. So has Swiss Re, and so has every insurer with half a brain. Climate alarmism is the insurer’s perfect storm, people will have to insure against all the foretold dooms—they have to protect themselves from flood, fire, famine, drought, sea level, storms, insect-borne diseases, and all of the thermally-induced biblical curses that were supposed to appear a decade ago. (We’re earnestly assured their appearance has only been postponed, not cancelled, so I guess there’s still hope for the rain of frogs.) Every time James Hansen or another of the terminally alarmist folks talks up the future climate terrors, the insurance industry applauds them all the way to the bank.

The second one is that like any business, insurers want to increase their income and cut their costs, or in other words, increase their profits. The best, of course, is if they can increase their incomes with no increase in costs or overheads. Then it’s all profit, of which more anon.

The third is that, despite all of Mr. Nutter’s hype and his charts, there is no evidence that  extreme weather events are increasing. Even the IPCC has been dragged kicking and screaming to admit this. The land has been warming for a couple hundred years, but nowhere in there are any thermal catastrophes, or any increase in the extremes of wind, water, and weather.

Now with those three things in mind, let’s look at the insurers’ first prescription for the Congressfolk. They want tax credits for people to strengthen their houses … and that means that when the next inevitable weather calamity hits, Mr. Nutter, Esq. and his merry men will make even more money. Fewer claims for loss means more money in the bank.

I mean, that is a work of genius—in the name of green caution, convince Congress to give special tax breaks to a subsection of all taxpayers, that is to say homeowners. But not just any homeowners, a special subclass of homeowners, those who get their roofs blown off and such. They are a special subclass because they’re the ones costing the insurance companies money. So we give those folks tax breaks for strengthening their buildings. As a result, tax revenues go down, a small percentage of the taxpayers get a special tax break, the poor get nothing, and the insurance companies’ revenues go up … and this is supposed to be a good thing? The brilliant arrogance of the plan is stunning.

If nothing else, you gotta admire the gall of the thief proposing that we pay him to rob people … not that the insurers need the money, they’ve already made billions off of the climate scam, and they’ll make billions more before the lunacy has run its course.

Of course, once the houses are strengthened, I assume most folks reading this know enough not to expect the insurance rates to drop—after all, James Hansen has assured the insurers that a major calamity is inevitable, Thermageddon is just around the corner. So the insurers can’t possibly reduce their rates, that wouldn’t be fiscally responsible in the face of grave imaginary danger …

So the rates will remain the same, or even go up to match the prophesied thermal meltdown, and the losses will go down, and the insurers will make more money on both ends.

Remind me again why this lucre-driven jackanapes has been invited to speak on the same platform with climate scientists? Mr. Nutter may be an excellent lawyer, but in front of Congress with his insurance hat on he is just a wallet with a mouth, crying “Feed me! Feed me!”.

Now that you understand how the game is played, lets look at the other insurance company proposals, and I’ll translate them one by one, although you could likely do it yourselves. I will list their points in bold type, verbatim.

Incent communities to develop and implement mitigation and resiliency initiatives.

English is such a great language. We’re going to “incent” communities to implement initiatives that will reduce the costs to the insurance companies. How to “incent” them is not specified, but I assume it involves “incenting” them with taxpayers money.

I don’t have to assume it will increase the insurers’ profits, however, that’s a given. Any “mitigation and resiliency initiatives” will put money directly into the insurers’ Swiss bank accounts. That’s the pure gravy I mentioned above. No additional expenses. No associated costs. No increases in overheads. Just a pure reduction in claims for loss, and that’s 100% profit.

• Reform the National Flood Insurance Program to reflect extreme weather and climate risk in its rates.

In other words, reducing the insurers costs from claims for loss is not enough—the insurance companies also want to be able to increase the rates at the same time. Note that the clever Mr. Nutter doesn’t mention the word “increase”, as in “increase the rates”. After all, “increase” is such an ugly term, don’t you think? No, they merely want to “reflect extreme weather and climate risk” by appropriately embiggening the premiums required under the Program, but they are not increasing the rates, oh, no, don’t say that.

Never mind that there is no evidence of an increase in extreme weather, despite 200 years of warming. Never mind that “climate risk” is undefined as befits its ethereal nature. They want to be able to increase the rates, so truth is not on the list of necessary ingredients.

• Apply Federal standards to state/local building codes and incorporate climate and extreme weather risk into these standards.

This is the same as their first proposal, just another way to get the buildings stronger to reduce the insurance companies’ costs. It will not be matched with a commensurate reduction in rates, so it is pure profit to the industry. Money for jam, as they say.

Next, “climate and extreme weather risk” are already in the standards. The standards involve engineers, not insurance lawyers. Do they think extreme wind and weather are not considered by every structural engineer?

Let me note one other profit stream for the insurance industries. Every time any standard is increased, whether for real or for imagined risks, the costs (and thus the value) of the building go up. And from the moment that construction starts until it is demolished, the building is insured. Finally, the premium paid to the insurers is some percentage of the insured value … I’m sure you can do the math.

• Purchase or relocate properties near coastal or river areas at repeat risk.

This one translates as “we’re tired of being forced to insure losers, so the US Government should buy them out using taxpayers’ money.”

Why doesn’t the Government ever do things like that for me? I mean, why don’t they solve some big business problem that is costing me money? And more to the point, if people insist on building on flood plains and barrier islands and below sea level, why should you and I or the US Government have to pay for their foolishness?

• Use nature to mitigate risk before and after extreme events.

Noble, green, and low-cost, nature is just the ticket … plus it puts money in the insurers’ pockets. Gotta love nature.

I could go on, but I’m sure you get the point. Once you look past the coat after coat of green paint on this pile of most cleverly worded proposals, it is nothing but a greed-driven, highly disguised push to have Congress do the insurers’ dirty work, and to have the taxpayers pay for it.

In my opinion, the insurance companies do not belong on the same dais with the scientists. Mr. Nutter’s proposed actions, one and all, increase the profits of the insurers. If we implemented all of his ideas they’d make billions more than otherwise. If scientists need to declare their conflicts of interest, then it should be noted that the insurance companies make more money out of climate alarmism than  James Hansen ever made, even with his salary, his pension, and his awards. Not to mention the generous gifts he accepted … but all of that pales before money made by the insurers. They started stoking the climate hysteria early and often, and have kept pushing the hype right up to the present. And during that time, they have made billions out of the madness of crowds, they are looking to jack their profits even more … and someone thinks we should listen to a single word they say on the subject?

I mean, think about it. The insurance companies have it made. They have hordes of otherwise reasonable people who have drunk the koolaid and go around spouting doomsday prophecies about the Thermal End Times, and about simultaneous droughts and floods, and about meters and meter of sea level rise … it’s an insurer’s wet dream to have suckers of all stripes sounding every alarm bell like that, it’s golden.

Because to an insurance company, alarm bells and frightened people are money in the bank.

So no, they should not get a say at the highest levels. They should not get a special hearing in front of Congress. We know what they will say, duh, no mystery there. They will say that the taxpayers should pay for repairs and changes and mitigations that will make the insurers more money. In a way I don’t blame them for saying that, although I don’t like the deception, it’s a businesses’ job to sell their product.

But I do blame anyone who pays the slightest attention to Munich Re and Swiss Re and Frank Nutter and the rest of the insurance folks on the subject of climate. They are not your friends. Their advice is 100% self-serving. Their proposed benefits are measured in dollars, and not your dollars—dollars in their Swiss bank accounts.

Global warming supporters say that the science is all on their side … so who did the global warming folks send to plead their case to Congress?

An insurance company lawyer who says “fill our pockets with money, suckers, it’s all ever so green, and oh, you’re picking up the tab for lunch” …

I must say, however, that if Heidi Cullen and Frank Nutter are part of the global warming supporters “A-Team”, that we skeptical folk must be winning. That’s a pretty pathetic lineup.

w.

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Fred from Canuckistan
July 20, 2013 6:46 am

When you are running a grift, when the scam is in full swing, you must never, ever show any doubt.
Best send in the slick lawyer instead of a real scientist to argue the case. Lawyers are far more experienced liars, professionals in fact at deception and accumulating a series of partial truths in order to create a deception.
Actually, that description describes a lot of the stuff coming out of The Team, CRU, NASA GISS, Greenpeace, the WWF, The Goreacle etc.

archibaldtuttle
July 20, 2013 6:53 am

Inevitably, trade factions introduce public choice complications and the long history of insurance industry dalliance with warmist policies deserves skepticism if not outright cyncism. To an extent this is a problem that needs to be cleaned up from within as Nutters testimony completely ignores industry tools for dealing with these problems.
to speak of premiums or the cost of insurance as one monolithic concept is equally silly. rates have risen dramatically for those in coastal locations subject to storm damage (as flood insurance itself is virtually unavailable in the private market having been displaced by earlier reactionary public insurance policy.)
but just as farm association policies favoring ethanol should make one cynical, they don’t represent the outlook of individual farmers. While the universe of insurance companies is a bit more attenuated than that of farmers, and economic response to these phenomenon are complicated by barriers to entry in the industry and complex state and federal laws with vast unintended consequences, you are simply flat wrong to suggest that premiums will not go down if risk of loss goes down. They will. Look at life insurance rates for non-smokers. But in our infinite wisdom health insurance companies can’t do the same thing.
If there is a large disparity between premiums and risks, capital will flow into the insurance industry and seek business by discounting against that spread in one way or another — premium or underwriting or some combination.
Insurance company suggestions for tax credits to harden threatened property come in a context where the kneejerk proposition has been for insurance policy (sorry) to be set by legislation rather than by simple economics where the insurance company offers a significant discount and/or underwriting consideration against recently inflated rates or refusal to write coverage in consequence of homeowners undertaking such retrofitting.
To an extent the public policy apparatus has already been captured because codes for new construction impose many of these requirements. I’m not suggesting Gerry Parker is wrong in seeing these as sensible but this could be done privately by the establishment of codes by insurance companies to meet underwriting guidelines. If you can’t get insurance you can’t get a mortgage.
There is a degree of public interest in that the government is essentially the disaster insurer of last resort and local government has property tax revenues and local economic functions at stake. But if we really allowed the market to function instead of imagining the least ripple was ‘market failure’ requiring legislation these risks would be better attenuated and more widely covered by private action.
But someone would no doubt call this all discrimination against people who don’t have the money to make those repairs. Then this would result in maybe a tax on insurance premiums for those who did make the repairs to create some grant pogrom for those who didn’t which either would fund repairs or subsidize insurance. The government knows no end of this kind of reactionary legislation and there is little wonder that the Wesley Mouches of our day working for the insurance companies are simply hellbent on getting theirs.
There is a free rider complication given government disaster aid — see obamacare and the individual mandate — but if insurance is more widely available for a wider range of perils with the main regulatory oversight being monitoring of reserves if those fire and flood insurance rates in Australia are really out of line they’ll come down, because their are few barriers to entry into a lucrative business. If they aren’t out of line then governments have to tailor disaster assistance for perverse incentives.
Yes it is reasonable to object to the proposal for tax credits for weather hardening, but it is of the same species as tax credits for owning homes in the first place, a government gift to realtors, banks, homebuilders, etc.
Or the many state govt. rules against prepayment penalties on loans, one of the most dislocating economic policies we have in that arena.
I simply don’t buy the fear thing. You have to get insurance to get a mortgage. The only people to whom the fear rationale would apply are folks who have built value with sweat instead of bank equity or have paid off their mortgages. So I don’t buy that the insurance industry participation in the extreme weather pogram is to make a few retirees who have had their mortgage burning party buy insurance who wouldn’t.

Ronald Voisin
July 20, 2013 7:13 am

Willis,
I very much enjoy and appreciate your posts and this one is no exception.
However, my sense of things is that we are losing this battle insofar as congress is likely to take many actions consistent with the ringing alarm bells.

highflight56433
July 20, 2013 7:55 am

knr says:
July 20, 2013 at 2:04 am
People do not buy insurance because of what ‘they know will happen’ but because of what they fear ‘may happen ‘ its a product that relies on fear to sell in the first place. Keep that in mind when dealing with such people , no fear no bucks .
True. Additionally, the insurance industry has lobbied law makers to force us to purchase insurance. There are those of us who are not interested in purchasing insurance. For example, assume I have been driving for 40 years. My average cost of auto insurance has been $700 annually. So far, that is approximately $28,000 of unnecessary fear protection. No accidents or claims. Similarly with house insurance. How many homes in your neighborhood have had weather related damage? The root of the issue is acceptable risk. Just like getting on those spam in a can airline flying coffins. The risk is real, but the perception is it is safe, yet there is a presence of venders who will sell you “additional insurance.” The bottom line is insurance is a national fraud of fear mongering. Sound familiar? CAGW?
The notion is implanted and made into law that “you need it because I say you need it.” Now we all have to have it. One less freedom. Such hearings in congress only lead to more regulation and more control. You want to live on the beach? Go for it, but it is your risk, not mine. We are forced to pay insurance to cover those who milk the insurance industry.

Mike M
July 20, 2013 8:03 am

“Provide tax credits to individuals for specified mitigation and resiliency actions associated with extreme weather and climate change.”
Or “penalize” those who do not, tomato tomahtoe.

John F. Hultquist
July 20, 2013 8:18 am

Thanks Willis.
On the front end, the small comfort in all of this is that our retirement account includes a little slice of an S&P 500 index fund. A search of same claims (nice word choice, huh?) to have 17 insurance related entries. The rear end view is that a tiny bit of what we pay for insurance on house and property must help pay for the Juris Doctorate with the Cheshire Cat smile. Why do I suddenly feel the need for a shower?
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Blade says:
July 20, 2013 at 4:23 am
“You can always tell a natural-born leftist, and it really has nothing to do with party politics, and certainly nothing to do with Science. It is all about the instinctual compulsion to sit back and spend other people’s money.

Bingo! “instinctual compulsion” .. but not just OPM; I know a few of these folks. They believe they are more enlightened. Our money is just one of the things they are instinctually compelled to control.

Eliza
July 20, 2013 8:19 am

OY but Mann is able to proceed with defamation case. against the newspaper etc check

Retired Engineer John
July 20, 2013 8:40 am

I live in Florida on the Gulf coast in a concrete and steel condo on the beach. Many of the proposals made by Mr Nutter have been implemented by the state of Florida. Apparently he is attempting to make some of these nation wide. I do not understand the objective of your post and where you got all this information since you live in California. If you live on the coast, you need insurance and it is often hard to find. Mr Nutter is using the global warming scare to advance to advance his proposals; but I see nothing wrong with his proposals.

rogerknights
July 20, 2013 8:47 am

harrywr2 says:
July 20, 2013 at 6:31 am

“So as you might imagine, the insurance companies have been the allies of climate alarmists from day one. Munich Re has been strongly pro-alarm since the early days.”

Profits are taxable. If an insurance regulator requires an insurance company to retain a portion of profits to pay out potential future losses then those profits become ‘non-taxable’ loss reserves.

Not only that, they become available to use for investment in stocks and bonds, with the profits skimmed off. This is how Buffett has made his fortune, via Berkshire Hathaway, which owns one of those European Reinsurance outfits.

Mike McMillan
July 20, 2013 8:55 am

” … the insurance companies do not belong on the same dias with the scientists.”
dais
[Buenos días … fixed, thanks. -w.]

Joseph Bastardi
July 20, 2013 9:26 am

The odd thing is that the weather is variable enough and capable of enough without having to bang a co2 AGW gong. If you want to live near a beach, on a flood plains or where tornadoes and antelope roam, weather happens. Come to think of it, it happens every where. The insurance companies don’t need climate change propaganda to hype weather, it is naturally capable of it. What is horrible is the agw missive that is shutting down the economy.
I wonder how anyone is going to pay a premium, if they are not working?

July 20, 2013 9:28 am

Thanks, Willis. Another excellent article.
The multiple adverse consequences of the global warming scam!

highflight56433
July 20, 2013 9:59 am

Well, there needs to be a little more thought behind this. The real intent is governmental takeover of your property. The insurance companies true motive is to lobby the feds to regulate you off your beach front, river front, lake front, etc. Eventually removing the insurance industry from the expense they carry on those risks. It’s all in the name of saving you from yourself. It is no different than the road improvements with bicycle lanes, pretty trees and shrubs, with fewer lanes for evil SUV owners. Mark my words, property owners such as “Retired Engineer John” will eventually lose their property rights, their property, their investment, their ability to purchase insurance: which means no living on that property. It is pretty simple to see the long term motive.
(Why do I get a message “Sorry, unable to post…)

July 20, 2013 10:00 am

One of your best, Willis. As Truthseeker and Sam the First, said earlier: “Follow the Money.” When business is in front of Congress, half the time it is to get some advantage for themselves. When businesses are behind Congress, 99% of the time it is to get the same thing.

Gail Combs
July 20, 2013 10:16 am

Joseph Bastardi says: July 20, 2013 at 9:26 am
……. What is horrible is the agw missive that is shutting down the economy.
I wonder how anyone is going to pay a premium, if they are not working?
>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
One has to wonder what in heck is going through the heads of all these numskull politicians. The USA already has a 22% unemployment rate and they want to toss modern first world citizens back into the world of the 1800’s without any of the life skills needed to survive and with ten times the population. There were 38,555,983 individuals in 1870 in the USA, 53% of whom were farmers and now there are 316,285,000 with 82% residing in cities and suburbs. Permanently turning off the electricity in US cities and Sandy will look like a pleasant dream and Detroit the Emerald City of Oz.
MemoryVault and and TonyfromOz and a few others over at Joanne Nova go into why solar and wind ABSOLUTELY CAN NOT serve as “the Primary.” One single stable source, which is used to establish the phase and runs at a set, steady output. Keep mucking about adding more and more intermittent supplies from roof top solar and wind farms and we are going to see blackouts becoming very common. Heck we just had three today and one took my computer off-line (It is nice and sunny and 86F)
Now picture trying to run a bank or a business or worse a factory with the power going up and down like a yoyo. Two companies I worked for in the 1980’s had their own power because they couldn’t put up with 10 outages a year from the public supply.

July 20, 2013 10:19 am

And in case anybody missed my comments here at WUWT about Frank Nutter from this past Tuesday and last October, about his early-on ties to Gore / Greenpeace / Gelbspan:
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/07/16/climate-change-showdown-coming-to-the-senate-thursday/#comment-1365064
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/10/09/now-alarmists-are-making-the-public-believe-in-the-extreme-weather-boogeyman/#comment-1105242

highflight56433
July 20, 2013 10:49 am

Russel Cook: Enviro-activists are all just one big happy family. No surprise that Frank Nutter shows up at their various reunions……
Exactly!
It is a path of government eminent domain: Government take over of YOUR propety. The most common uses of property taken by eminent domain are for government buildings and other facilities, public utilities, highways, and railroads; BIG HOWEVER, YOUR PROPERTY may also be taken for reasons of public safety. As in beach dwelling. Or nortoriously for big auto in Detroit. This unconstitutional case delivered to us by a crooked on the take judge really gave big government the green light to steal your property. It’s for your own good and welfare!!!
Big insurance owns congress. You don’t have a chance or a voice.

highflight56433
July 20, 2013 10:54 am

S/B … with BIG GOVERNMENT, HOWEVER, YOUR PROPERTY… (funky typing)

highflight56433
July 20, 2013 11:14 am

More soap box: Just as fuel cost increases have sucked disposable income, so has and will the insurance industry. Hundreds of billions from the economy that otherwise went into our “toys” has been rerouted to … oil. Don’t get me wrong, I love by SUVs, that is why I keep paying for the fuel. However, those dollars on fuel and insurance are not purchasing addtional personal property, electronics and $100 bottles of my favorite scotch, wine, etc.There is good reason for this post. The AGW crowd is working all the angles.
Mr. Bastardi is right on. Weather is everywhere; why pick on the shorelines? Paint the picture. 🙂

Tom in Florida
July 20, 2013 11:37 am

Willis Eschenbach says:
July 20, 2013 at 10:03 am
re: Tom in Florida says: July 20, 2013 at 6:46 am: First of all, the only time you are required to have wind and flood insurance on a building is if there is a mortgage on the property.
“In the US, you’re not rich until you owe a million. Since having a mortgage is the case for most buildings in the US, not sure what your point is here. ”
The point was nothing more than to make sure everyone knows that insurance is not required for everyone. There are many folks that have paid off their mortgages who are not millionaires. Apparently living in Kalifornia gives people a warped view of property values elsewhere in the U.S
Willis also says:
“Next, after many years my home is mortgage free. However, that took decades, and I am far from wealthy enough to have it rebuilt. So as a practical matter, insurance is not optional for me either. Is it insured against flood? Dangbetcha, it’s on top of a hill, best flood insurance there is. ”
As I stated insurance is used to prevent great financial loss and that it is an individual choice as to how much each person is willing to risk so you really do have an option. Your choice is to guard against the cost of rebuilding so you purchase insurance to cover that potential loss. My point being is that insurance is a good thing and we do have choices as to how much insurance we need and what we will pay for that insurance. You do not insure against flood, obviously being high on a hill you see very little risk in not having flood insurance. I on the other hand know that even though i am not in a designated flood zone, flooding can happen at any time any where in Florida so I choose to purchase flood insurance. Again, choices as to risk and that is the true basis for insurance. By the way that also applies to health insurance but people have been brainwashed into believing it is a must have. We really need to do a much better job of teaching the masses about the reasons for insurance and how to evaluate and manage the costs. That would save a whole lot of money!

Bob
July 20, 2013 11:50 am

Willis said, “… there is no evidence that extreme weather events are increasing
Allow me to observe that saying, “There is no evidence of extreme weather events increasing.” may not be definitive to some people.
I believe it is more definitive to say, “ The evidence shows that extreme weather events are not increasing.“. We have evidence. Saying there is no evidence of something does not mean that there is not evidence of something else. Or, something like that.
Hmmm, it sounds like I’ve been nipping a bit early in the day.