May saw the twenty-fifth anniversary of the signing of the deed of incorporation of the Pool Español de Riesgos Medioambientales (Spanish Environmental Risks Pool). Considering that now is a good time to offer a brief review about why this pool was organised, if it is meeting its commended tasks and, if these are proving useful for member companies of the Pool, for their customers and for the insurance industry in general.
How the pool serves its members and their insured
Over these last 25 years, the technical challenges which the
Pool Español de Riesgos Medioambientales has had to face have not been few in number. Challenges that have not been without problems, though neither without a sense of motivation and excitement about making inroads into them. And all of this has been with the sole objective of providing the best, swiftest and most neutral service possible for our member firms.
First of these challenges was to establish the
terms of coverage that could be offered, while striving for these to be sufficiently flexible to allow them to be broadened, modified and adapted to new knowledge and demands and to legislative requirements.
Second was to tackle the structure of a
premium rate that had to include some specific cases, such as adding to the classical vision of business facilities their potential hazards for the natural elements in their surroundings, which, in turn, were going to be the main components that stood to be harmed in the event of losses and which, therefore, ought to be factored into the rate. Moreover, this rate should be sufficiently adaptable to take account of the know-how and experience that might, over the course of time, be acquired.
Another significant challenge was to gain a better understanding of industrial activities, to which end a
set of questionnaires were prepared to allow our member firms to gather, in a straightforward and reliable manner, all the information required to acquire a more complete knowledge of the environmental facets of every industrial facility, so as to be in a position to offer them better insurance coverage. One of the major challenges in these questionnaires was to make them as simple and specific as possible, with the intention of making them as easy as possible to complete for the insured.
Even so, there were more complex business activities that, in behalf of understanding them better, the questionnaires proved insufficient. This led us to write
adjustment guides and to implement a
system of accreditations for the loss adjusters of our associate firms that might allow us a good understanding of the facilities and their surroundings and, based on this, offer re-insurance premiums and cover that was better suited, incorporating a system of discounts and surcharges depending on the special nature of each facility and the environmental risk management that was implemented there. This system has produced accreditation for over 300 loss adjusters, who have put together more than 4,000 reports in which over 5,000 recommendations have been made aimed at helping the insured to improve and prevent the environmental risks associated with their facilities.
Desires of advance in analysing risk took us to adopt a leading role in promoting and elaboration, within AENOR, of a standard for analysing environmental risks that we thought could be of benefit to all the stakeholders involved: insurers, banks, government bodies, social groups and, above all, industrialists themselves. This is how we decided to take a leading role in the drafting and the wording of both the experimental version of
UNE standard 150008 as well as the final version. This standard was subsequently included in the
Environmental Liability legislation, wherein it was taken into account as the bases for individual and sector Analyses of Environmental Risks (MIRATs), Sector Guides and Rate Tables, all focussed on establishing the limit on financial cover to be taken out.
Regarding the MIRATs and the Sector Guides, the Pool also collaborated with the CEOE (Spanish Confederation of Employers' Organizations) in the preliminary advisory work for a large number of them.
Nevertheless, the usefulness of UNE 150008 does not end there, as its purpose is to be a basic tool to prevent environmental risks and implement a system that allows them to be managed properly.
Environmental losses are also part of our daily work, because, although we are re-insurers, we intervene directly, by delegation on the part of the associate companies, and take on the technical management of them. These losses have certain special properties as compared to those of another kind that make that handling claims for them presents special features and requirements. They, therefore, tend to
be high-profile when happening and it is often the case that the media report them. Nonetheless, it is usual for the SEPRONA (the
Guardia Civil Nature Protection Service) to take part and for more than one government body to be involved, for which reason the
necessary dialogue requires a high level of technical knowledge to allow a fluent degree of communication.
On the other hand, with this kind of loss, according to article 9 of the Environmental Liability Law and the implementing regulation thereof, as opposed to what happens with losses of other kinds, the insured
is under an obligation to report the loss or threat of loss immediately to the competent authority. This practice runs counter to the norm in the case of liability insurance claims.
Another especially important aspect is
defining the loss, which is often complicated and costly and requires specialist knowledge and sophisticated resources.
The obligation to redress the environmental damage caused, which rules out the possibility of the insurer providing a solution for claims via financial compensation, is another feature of it.
Lastly, it should be remarked that these tend to be
long-tail claims, which typically remain open cases for several years, given that correcting them requires a lot of time and a period of surveillance and monitoring to check that they have actually been put to rights properly.
To deal with such losses and give proper assistance to the member firms in handling them, the Pool has specialised and qualified technical staff allowing it to take charge of claims and manage them until they are satisfactorily resolved in the full sense, both with respect to the member firms and the insured, as well as the various government bodies and the interest groups involved.
Then, last but not least,
educational efforts for the underwriters, specialist staff and salespersons in our member firms should be pointed out. Not to mention the
communications and disseminating work carried out for public and private organisations, university master’s degrees, the media, etc., in attempts to increase awareness of the need to combat these risks and do our little bit to protect and preserve one of the most valued assets that we have been blessed with: our environment.
Yet, after all, the most important thing that we have learned over these years is that, going forward, we still have a fascinating task to perform.