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RMS Study Reveals Potential for US$100 Billion in
Losses from Large Earthquake in Beijing, China
Company Analyzes Impacts of Modern-Day Repeat of
1679 Sanhe-Pinggu Earthquake
Newark, Calif. –
March 20, 2007 –
Risk Management Solutions (RMS), the world’s leading provider of
products and services for catastrophe risk management, announced the
preliminary results of a study analyzing the impacts of the 1679
Sanhe-Pinggu Earthquake based on the 2007 population and property
exposures of the Beijing, China area. The largest historical earthquake
in the vicinity of Beijing, this magnitude 8.0 event centered 50 km (31
mi) east of Beijing brought destruction to the region in the early years
of the Qing Dynasty. The study is intended to not only broaden the
awareness of risk but to investigate the implications of a repeat of
this event on the rapidly expanding insurance and mortgage markets in
China. The risk analysis performed was based on the new RMS® China
Earthquake Model, scheduled for release in spring 2007.
While building standards have improved significantly since 1976, when
the collapse of unreinforced masonry buildings in the Tangshan
Earthquake killed over 240,000 people, the new RMS study has shown the
far-reaching impact of a major event striking a highly commercialized
and populated area of China. The RMS analysis indicates a potential
economic loss of 800 billion RMB (US$100 billion) throughout the region,
over half of which would occur in Beijing alone. A share of this loss
would be borne by the insurance industry, as well as mortgage lenders
who will be impacted by damage to uninsured properties. Detailed impacts
and loss results from the RMS scenario study will be released in a
special report on Wednesday, March 21.
The 2007 Sanhe-Pinggu Earthquake study is the latest in a series of
reports RMS has published about earthquake risk in China. In 2004, RMS
published a report on the issues and need for the formation of a
technically sound and commercially viable market for earthquake
insurance in China. And in July of 2006, in collaboration with the CEA’s
Institute for Engineering Mechanics (IEM), RMS published a 30-year
retrospective report on the 1976 Tangshan Earthquake.
"As
cities across Asia have rapidly increased in population and commercial
development, a much greater proportion of the overall population now
lives in cities like Beijing. It is only a matter of time before an
earthquake strikes one of these cities, potentially leading to
devastating effects,” commented Dr. Weimin Dong, chief risk officer of
RMS. “We are committed to actively engaging in the development of a
world-class risk market in the most dynamic economy in the world. The
availability of a model for earthquake loss will give the needed
technical foundation to mitigate the losses and prepare financially for
a large event.”
The RMS® China Earthquake
Model underlying the Sanhe-Pinggu Earthquake study will be introduced to
the China insurance and investment market at seminars in Beijing on
March 21 and Shanghai March 23. Visit
http://www.rms.com/2007ChinaSeminars/ for more information.
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