WTW continues to broaden insurance programme to safeguard coral reef

It is the third of year the initiative

WTW continues to broaden insurance programme to safeguard coral reef

Environmental

By Mika Pangilinan

WTW and the Mesoamerican Reef Fund (MAR Fund) have announced the third annual placement of the MAR Insurance Programme, with AXA Climate serving as the insurance capacity provider.

The programme, a crucial component of MAR Fund’s Reef Rescue Initiative, utilises parametric insurance to quickly deploy funds for community-led response activities in repairing reef damage in the aftermath of hurricanes.

The initiative operates across the 1,000 km Mesoamerican reef, spanning Mexico, Belize, Guatemala, and Honduras. With over 65 species of coral and more than 500 species of fish, the reef sustains the livelihoods, nutrition, and coastal protection of over two million people.

WTW’s involvement came in 2021 after it had developed a model that captures the correlation between hurricane intensity and reef damage.

With funding from the InsuResilience Solutions Fund (ISF), WTW first placed the programme across four sites, with two in Mexico and another two in Belize. Following a successful first year, the programme was renewed and expanded to include two sites in Honduras and one in Guatemala.

This year’s renewal received financial support from the ISF and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), building on previous assistance from the Ocean Risk and Resilience Action Alliance (ORRAA). Additionally, incumbent AXA Climate was selected as the insurance capacity provider, following a competitive placement process by WTW.

For its third year, the programme will now encompass two additional sites in Honduras, plus two more in Belize through a partnership with the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS). This expansion will bring the total number of reef sites covered by the programme to 11 across the MAR region.

“Entering the third year of this programme demonstrates how the convening powers of collaborative, trusted partnerships and pre-arranged finance can move the needle on coastal protection and ecosystem resilience,” said Simon Young, co-lead of the disaster risk finance and parametrics team in the Climate and Resilience Hub at WTW.

The programme in action

In a Press release, WTW detailed the role that the programme had played in the restoration of the Turneffe Atoll Marine Reserve in Belize after it was damaged by category 1 Hurricane Lisa last November.

According to the release, WTW’s calculations confirmed that wind intensity reached 70 knots. This triggered a US$175,000 payout that MAR Fund received in full within just two weeks of the event.

Soon after, MAR Fund disbursed this payout to brigades coordinated by the Turneffe Atoll Sustainability Association (TASA). The brigades were later deployed to assess reef damage and undertake initial response activities, including stabilising and repositioning almost 200 coral fragments.

María José González, executive director of MAR Fund, stressed the innovative nature of the programme as an instrument for risk management and emergency response.

“Through this programme, MAR Fund and its partners, including the governments of the four MAR countries, contribute to the resilience and recovery of the Mesoamerican Reef,” González said.

Similarly, Dr Annette Detken, head of the InsuResilience Solutions Fund, praised the MAR Insurance Programme for its contributions to nature-based solutions against climate risks.

“The ISF is proud to co-fund this innovative insurance programme protecting a unique natural treasure and providing livelihoods for vulnerable people in the MAR region,” she said.

Antoine Denoix, CEO of AXA Climate, also emphasised the significance of protecting nature as a long-term mechanism in the face of increasing climate-related disasters.

“As a pioneer in impact insurance, our team has demonstrated with this third renewal the consistency of its commitment to ocean conservation,” said Denoix. “AXA Climate is very proud to remain a key partner in the MAR’s resilience and to have contributed to its regeneration after Hurricane Lisa.”

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