If global warming's impact on the environment isn't enough to get you to
change your energy guzzling ways, maybe soaring homeowners insurance costs will
get your attention.
Insurers typically raise rates, curtail coverage or stop writing policies in
certain areas after a spate of bad weather or big disaster season and the 2005
hurricane seasons was no different.
Now in 2006 with droughts and fires in the West and Florida, floods in the
Northeast, more hurricanes in the Gulf Coast and twisters down South this year
-- not to mention what more Mother Nature will throw at the nation with a half
year still to go -- the rising
cost of homeowners insurance will spread financial disaster to more
households, even those not in disaster areas.
Insurers aren't off the hook. Inaccurate risk modeling, decades of discounted
rates and bad investments are part of the reason rates are rising.
And then there's global warming.
Global warming changes meteorological patterns and that typically spawns more
severe weather. Earth's slow-simmer
phenomenon has been blamed for the busy 2005 hurricane season, not to mention other
weird weather patterns worldwide.
If scientists who weigh in on the human-factor side of the equation are
right, then your carbon monoxide generating habits are contributing to higher
insurance costs.
And it's not just the cost of insurance.
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