Home Breadcrumb caret News Breadcrumb caret Claims Canada’s most-exposed flood regions Quebec has the highest historical average annual loss (AAL) for flood faced by any region across the country, at $861.3 million, but Yukon’s average annual loss per residential address (RA) stands at $925, well above Quebec’s $229 loss per residence. These figures are based on historical data presented during a Flood Task Force Update […] By Alyssa DiSabatino | June 10, 2022 | Last updated on October 30, 2024 2 min read iStock.com/pawel.gaul|iStock.com/FrankRamspott|Image provided by Matthew Godsoe, Cat IQ Connect. Quebec has the highest historical average annual loss (AAL) for flood faced by any region across the country, at $861.3 million, but Yukon’s average annual loss per residential address (RA) stands at $925, well above Quebec’s $229 loss per residence. These figures are based on historical data presented during a Flood Task Force Update by a federal government official at the Cat IQ Connect virtual series. Here’s what every province’s average loss expected to occur each year is, (from highest AAL per RA to the lowest): Province/Territory Total Average Annual Loss (AAL) Residential Addresses (RA) AAL per RA Yukon $13 million 14,078 $925 British Columbia $689.4 million 1,970,688 $350 New Brunswick $103.6 million 344,568 $301 Manitoba $105.3 million 457,831 $230 Quebec $861.3 million 3,766,438 $229 Nova Scotia 68.6 million 485,915 $141 Ontario 805.1 million 5,835,659 $138 Prince Edward Island $9.8 million 73,982 $133 Alberta $245.5 million 1,855,372 $132 Saskatchewan $54.5 million 426,427 $128 Newfoundland and Labrador $11.9 million 167,307 $71 Northwest Territories $0.6 million 9,388 $65 Nunavut 0.2 million 3,610 $44 The total annual average loss for all of Canada reaches $2.97 billion dollars, with over 15.4 million residential addresses, according to the actuarial analysis. That would make the average annual loss per residential address $192.7. These figures are based on historical data presented during a Flood Task Force Update by Matthew Godsoe, director of the resilience and economics integration division at Public Safety Canada, at the Cat IQ Connect virtual series. “This is what the breakdown looks like per residential address across the country when we splash out the total annual average losses from the damage functions across those provinces,” says Godsoe. “Most of the data that we have is between 50 and 100 years old for historical [analysis] across the country.” “There’s a limited number of properties that have extreme flood risk that drive up the average costs for everyone,” says Godsoe. These figures also allow the industry to be more targeted with risk management activities, he notes. Private insurers are currently discussing with the federal government a new national flood insurance program model. Two of four possible flood insurance models are the “most promising” for private-public engagement within the upcoming national flood insurance program, Godsoe says: the Flat Cap High-Risk Pool and Tiered High-Risk Pool. The task force is expected to publish this summer a Statement of Fact report, summarizing its findings of possible flood insurance solutions for the country. Feature image by iStock.com/pawel.gaul Alyssa DiSabatino Save Stroke 1 Print Group 8 Share LI logo