From E&E News

‘FEMA Will Go Away,’ Trump Says on Trip to Disaster Area

1/24/2025

From E&E News

FEMA Insurance Program Runs Out of Money

The Treasury Department loaned the flood program $2 billion to pay claims, likely raising costs for policyholders. 

 02/11/2025

The federal program that provides most of the nation’s flood insurance has run out of money to pay claims, forcing it to borrow $2 billion from taxpayers.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency, which runs the program, said Monday that claims worth billions of dollars due to catastrophic hurricanes in 2024 “have depleted” the program’s reserves.

From the Wall Street Journal

L.A. Has Big Plans to Rebuild After the Fires. Good Luck Getting Insurance.

Displaced residents seek a speedy return to city’s Pacific Palisades, but California’s largest insurer says, ‘Writing new policies doesn’t make any sense at this time’

March 11,2025

From the Wall Street Journal

The World Is Getting Riskier. Americans Don’t Want to Pay for It.

California is a microcosm of what happens when insurance breaks down: Either households face potential ruin, or the public is handed a financial time bomb.

January 19, 2025

From E&E News

$4T Municipal Bond Market Wakes Up to Climate Risk. (With help from Trump.)

The bonds are considered a safe investment. The Los Angeles wildfires sparked concern that climate change is making them risky.

February 25, 2025

S&P Global Ratings downgraded the credit rating of the Los Angeles water and power utility, citing “the increasing frequency and severity” of wildfires and signaling a potential awakening of the nation’s $4 trillion dollar municipal bond market to climate risk.

some experts called S&P’s move a watershed for a market they say has perilously ignored climate change and the risk of a disaster wiping out a city’s property tax base and forcing a bond default.

“I think we’re seeing the beginning of a crack,” said Alice Hill, who was National Security Council senior director for resilience policy in the Obama administration. “We know that with climate change, there’ll be bigger and worse disasters that will affect communities’ abilities to repay those bonds.”