RIMMA2025 Workshop | Swiss Civil Protection Service Tabletop Exercise on Extreme Drought: Insights for the Insurance Sector

Date:

Location:

University of Bern

Organised by:

WSL Extremes Research Program, Mobiliar Versicherung, MobiLab Universität Bern, SCOR

Languages:

English

Type of event:

Congresses and conferences

This workshop will analyze the outcomes of a Tabletop Exercise on Extreme Drought, conducted with members of the Swiss civil protection service, from the perspective of the insurance sector and its needs.

Extreme drought, with its anticipated direct and indirect impacts, poses a challenge for civil protection in Switzerland. Although the probability of multi-year droughts in Europe is still low, drought situations are expected to become more frequent and severe in future. Switzerland, compared to other neighboring countries, has little experience in dealing with drought; severe droughts have not occurred in Switzerland for many decades, partly due to the relative abundance of water in the Alps. A recent analysis of the capability of the Swiss civil protection service to cope with climate-related natural hazards such as drought recommends the implementation of joint exercises with partner organizations of the Swiss Federal Office for Civil Protection (FOCP).

To this end, the FOCP, the Swiss Federal Research Institute WSL’s Extremes Research Program, and the Center for Security Studies at ETH Zurich will facilitate a tabletop exercise, ‘Drought,’ in November 2024. Four teams comprised of members of the FOCP’s partner organizations (management, police, fire brigade, health, technical, and civil protection service) will be exposed to hypothetical but realistic multi-year drought scenarios, with consequences becoming progressively worse as the exercise develops. Allocated to the Swiss cantons of Aargau, Basel-Stadt, Grison, and Valais, each team must decide how to deploy their available resources to effectively manage the consequences of extreme drought. The central element of this exercise is the subsequent analysis of structures, processes, and resources, and how to improve them in view of future drought.

As slow-onset disasters affecting wide-ranging areas, drought events – and our responses to them – also challenge insurance companies providing funds for recovery to their clients. As well as the need to acquire a sound understanding of how the cascading effects of drought affect natural and social systems, insurers also have a key interest in encouraging insurance users to better prepare for and adapt to the changing climate and its impacts, including drought. This workshop will therefore provide insights into this important topic by analyzing the outcomes of the ‘Drought’ tabletop exercise through the prism of the insurance sector’s needs.

More information about RIMMA2025 (International Conference on Forecasting, Preparedness, Warning, and Response) can be found here.

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