California 2025-2026 Regular Session

California Assembly Bill AB1236 Compare Versions

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1-Amended IN Assembly April 10, 2025 Amended IN Assembly March 17, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1236Introduced by Assembly Member Celeste RodriguezFebruary 21, 2025An act to add and repeal Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) to of Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, relating to insurance. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1236, as amended, Celeste Rodriguez. Insurance: Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program.Existing law establishes the Department of Insurance, headed by the Insurance Commissioner, and provides for the powers and duties of the commissioner. Existing law requires the commissioner to convene a working group to identify, assess, and recommend risk transfer market mechanisms that promote investment in natural infrastructure to reduce the risks of climate change related to catastrophic events, create incentives for investment in natural infrastructure to reduce risks to communities, and provide mitigation incentives for private investment in natural lands to lessen exposure and reduce climate risks to public safety, property, utilities, and infrastructure.This bill would require the department to establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving specified goals, including developing proofs of concept that expand insurance options and testing community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, as specified. The bill would require the department to report to the Legislature Senate Committee on Insurance and the Assembly Committee on Insurance on program results on or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every 3 years thereafter. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2035.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) is added to Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, to read: Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.(b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.(c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.(d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.(e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.(f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.(g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.(h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature Senate Committee on Insurance and the Assembly Committee on Insurance on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.
1+Amended IN Assembly March 17, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1236Introduced by Assembly Member Celeste RodriguezFebruary 21, 2025An act to amend Section 622 add Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) to Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, relating to insurance. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1236, as amended, Celeste Rodriguez. Insurance: reinsurance. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program.Existing law establishes the Department of Insurance, headed by the Insurance Commissioner, and provides for the powers and duties of the commissioner. Existing law requires the commissioner to convene a working group to identify, assess, and recommend risk transfer market mechanisms that promote investment in natural infrastructure to reduce the risks of climate change related to catastrophic events, create incentives for investment in natural infrastructure to reduce risks to communities, and provide mitigation incentives for private investment in natural lands to lessen exposure and reduce climate risks to public safety, property, utilities, and infrastructure.This bill would require the department to establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving specified goals, including developing proofs of concept that expand insurance options and testing community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, as specified. The bill would require the department to report to the Legislature on program results on or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every 3 years thereafter. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2035.Existing law establishes the Department of Insurance, headed by the Insurance Commissioner, which regulates insurers and insurance practices. When an insurer obtains reinsurance, existing law requires them to communicate all the representations of the original insured, and also all the knowledge and information they possess, as specified, which are material to the risk.This bill would make technical, nonsubstantive changes to that provision.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NOYES Local Program: NO Bill TextThe people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) is added to Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, to read: Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.(b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.(c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.(d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.(e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.(f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.(g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.(h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.SECTION 1.Section 622 of the Insurance Code is amended to read:622.When an insurer obtains reinsurance, they must communicate all the representations of the original insured, and also all the knowledge and information they possess, whether previously or subsequently acquired, that are material to the risk.
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3- Amended IN Assembly April 10, 2025 Amended IN Assembly March 17, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1236Introduced by Assembly Member Celeste RodriguezFebruary 21, 2025An act to add and repeal Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) to of Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, relating to insurance. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1236, as amended, Celeste Rodriguez. Insurance: Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program.Existing law establishes the Department of Insurance, headed by the Insurance Commissioner, and provides for the powers and duties of the commissioner. Existing law requires the commissioner to convene a working group to identify, assess, and recommend risk transfer market mechanisms that promote investment in natural infrastructure to reduce the risks of climate change related to catastrophic events, create incentives for investment in natural infrastructure to reduce risks to communities, and provide mitigation incentives for private investment in natural lands to lessen exposure and reduce climate risks to public safety, property, utilities, and infrastructure.This bill would require the department to establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving specified goals, including developing proofs of concept that expand insurance options and testing community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, as specified. The bill would require the department to report to the Legislature Senate Committee on Insurance and the Assembly Committee on Insurance on program results on or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every 3 years thereafter. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2035.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: YES Local Program: NO
3+ Amended IN Assembly March 17, 2025 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION Assembly Bill No. 1236Introduced by Assembly Member Celeste RodriguezFebruary 21, 2025An act to amend Section 622 add Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) to Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, relating to insurance. LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGESTAB 1236, as amended, Celeste Rodriguez. Insurance: reinsurance. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program.Existing law establishes the Department of Insurance, headed by the Insurance Commissioner, and provides for the powers and duties of the commissioner. Existing law requires the commissioner to convene a working group to identify, assess, and recommend risk transfer market mechanisms that promote investment in natural infrastructure to reduce the risks of climate change related to catastrophic events, create incentives for investment in natural infrastructure to reduce risks to communities, and provide mitigation incentives for private investment in natural lands to lessen exposure and reduce climate risks to public safety, property, utilities, and infrastructure.This bill would require the department to establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving specified goals, including developing proofs of concept that expand insurance options and testing community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, as specified. The bill would require the department to report to the Legislature on program results on or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every 3 years thereafter. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2035.Existing law establishes the Department of Insurance, headed by the Insurance Commissioner, which regulates insurers and insurance practices. When an insurer obtains reinsurance, existing law requires them to communicate all the representations of the original insured, and also all the knowledge and information they possess, as specified, which are material to the risk.This bill would make technical, nonsubstantive changes to that provision.Digest Key Vote: MAJORITY Appropriation: NO Fiscal Committee: NOYES Local Program: NO
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5- Amended IN Assembly April 10, 2025 Amended IN Assembly March 17, 2025
5+ Amended IN Assembly March 17, 2025
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7-Amended IN Assembly April 10, 2025
87 Amended IN Assembly March 17, 2025
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109 CALIFORNIA LEGISLATURE 20252026 REGULAR SESSION
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1211 Assembly Bill
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1413 No. 1236
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1615 Introduced by Assembly Member Celeste RodriguezFebruary 21, 2025
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1817 Introduced by Assembly Member Celeste Rodriguez
1918 February 21, 2025
2019
21-An act to add and repeal Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) to of Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, relating to insurance.
20+An act to amend Section 622 add Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) to Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, relating to insurance.
2221
2322 LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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2524 ## LEGISLATIVE COUNSEL'S DIGEST
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27-AB 1236, as amended, Celeste Rodriguez. Insurance: Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program.
26+AB 1236, as amended, Celeste Rodriguez. Insurance: reinsurance. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program.
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29-Existing law establishes the Department of Insurance, headed by the Insurance Commissioner, and provides for the powers and duties of the commissioner. Existing law requires the commissioner to convene a working group to identify, assess, and recommend risk transfer market mechanisms that promote investment in natural infrastructure to reduce the risks of climate change related to catastrophic events, create incentives for investment in natural infrastructure to reduce risks to communities, and provide mitigation incentives for private investment in natural lands to lessen exposure and reduce climate risks to public safety, property, utilities, and infrastructure.This bill would require the department to establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving specified goals, including developing proofs of concept that expand insurance options and testing community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, as specified. The bill would require the department to report to the Legislature Senate Committee on Insurance and the Assembly Committee on Insurance on program results on or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every 3 years thereafter. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2035.
28+Existing law establishes the Department of Insurance, headed by the Insurance Commissioner, and provides for the powers and duties of the commissioner. Existing law requires the commissioner to convene a working group to identify, assess, and recommend risk transfer market mechanisms that promote investment in natural infrastructure to reduce the risks of climate change related to catastrophic events, create incentives for investment in natural infrastructure to reduce risks to communities, and provide mitigation incentives for private investment in natural lands to lessen exposure and reduce climate risks to public safety, property, utilities, and infrastructure.This bill would require the department to establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving specified goals, including developing proofs of concept that expand insurance options and testing community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, as specified. The bill would require the department to report to the Legislature on program results on or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every 3 years thereafter. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2035.Existing law establishes the Department of Insurance, headed by the Insurance Commissioner, which regulates insurers and insurance practices. When an insurer obtains reinsurance, existing law requires them to communicate all the representations of the original insured, and also all the knowledge and information they possess, as specified, which are material to the risk.This bill would make technical, nonsubstantive changes to that provision.
3029
3130 Existing law establishes the Department of Insurance, headed by the Insurance Commissioner, and provides for the powers and duties of the commissioner. Existing law requires the commissioner to convene a working group to identify, assess, and recommend risk transfer market mechanisms that promote investment in natural infrastructure to reduce the risks of climate change related to catastrophic events, create incentives for investment in natural infrastructure to reduce risks to communities, and provide mitigation incentives for private investment in natural lands to lessen exposure and reduce climate risks to public safety, property, utilities, and infrastructure.
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33-This bill would require the department to establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving specified goals, including developing proofs of concept that expand insurance options and testing community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, as specified. The bill would require the department to report to the Legislature Senate Committee on Insurance and the Assembly Committee on Insurance on program results on or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every 3 years thereafter. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2035.
32+This bill would require the department to establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving specified goals, including developing proofs of concept that expand insurance options and testing community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, as specified. The bill would require the department to report to the Legislature on program results on or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every 3 years thereafter. The bill would repeal these provisions on January 1, 2035.
33+
34+Existing law establishes the Department of Insurance, headed by the Insurance Commissioner, which regulates insurers and insurance practices. When an insurer obtains reinsurance, existing law requires them to communicate all the representations of the original insured, and also all the knowledge and information they possess, as specified, which are material to the risk.
35+
36+
37+
38+This bill would make technical, nonsubstantive changes to that provision.
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40+
3441
3542 ## Digest Key
3643
3744 ## Bill Text
3845
39-The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) is added to Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, to read: Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.(b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.(c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.(d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.(e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.(f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.(g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.(h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature Senate Committee on Insurance and the Assembly Committee on Insurance on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.
46+The people of the State of California do enact as follows:SECTION 1. Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) is added to Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, to read: Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.(b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.(c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.(d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.(e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.(f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.(g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.(h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.SECTION 1.Section 622 of the Insurance Code is amended to read:622.When an insurer obtains reinsurance, they must communicate all the representations of the original insured, and also all the knowledge and information they possess, whether previously or subsequently acquired, that are material to the risk.
4047
4148 The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4249
4350 ## The people of the State of California do enact as follows:
4451
45-SECTION 1. Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) is added to Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, to read: Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.(b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.(c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.(d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.(e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.(f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.(g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.(h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature Senate Committee on Insurance and the Assembly Committee on Insurance on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.
52+SECTION 1. Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) is added to Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, to read: Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.(b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.(c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.(d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.(e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.(f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.(g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.(h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.
4653
4754 SECTION 1. Article 2.5 (commencing with Section 12945) is added to Chapter 2 of Division 3 of the Insurance Code, to read:
4855
4956 ### SECTION 1.
5057
51- Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.(b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.(c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.(d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.(e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.(f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.(g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.(h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature Senate Committee on Insurance and the Assembly Committee on Insurance on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.
58+ Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.(b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.(c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.(d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.(e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.(f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.(g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.(h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.
5259
53- Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.(b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.(c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.(d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.(e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.(f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.(g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.(h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature Senate Committee on Insurance and the Assembly Committee on Insurance on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.
60+ Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.(b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.(c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.(d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.(e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.(f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.(g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.(h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.
5461
5562 Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program
5663
5764 Article 2.5. Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program
5865
5966 12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:(a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.(b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.(c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.(d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.(e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.(f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.(g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.(h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.
6067
6168
6269
6370 12945. The Legislature finds and declares all of the following:
6471
6572 (a) California is facing increasingly extreme impacts of climate change, as evidenced by record-setting heat waves, devastating wildfires, and destructive flooding.
6673
6774 (b) In 2018, the Governor and the Legislature enacted Senate Bill No. 30 (Chapter 614 of the Statutes of 2018), directing the Insurance Commissioner to convene the Climate Insurance Working Group. The Climate Insurance Working Group was convened in 2019, including representatives from leading California environmental groups, international climate policy groups, universities, and the insurance and reinsurance sector, and met publicly to address the priorities of the enacted legislation.
6875
6976 (c) In 2021, the Climate Insurance Working Group published the Climate Insurance Report, available on the departments internet website, containing recommendations to help protect California communities, preserve nature, and build resiliency to climate impacts. The Climate Insurance Report focused on reducing the impacts to communities from flooding, extreme heat, and wildfires, and the compounding effects of ongoing drought.
7077
7178 (d) The Climate Insurance Report stated that as the impacts of climate change intensify, insurance protection gaps will likely widen, exacerbating the disproportionate impacts from climate-intensified events faced by vulnerable communities.
7279
7380 (e) The Climate Insurance Report noted that individuals with insurance tend to recover faster from wildfires, floods, and other disasters, and that insurance uptake speeds economic and social recovery of communities.
7481
7582 (f) However, even though climate-intensified risks are increasing, fire insurance is becoming increasingly expensive and difficult to obtain. Few households in California have insurance for flooding, and insurance related to extreme heat events is rare.
7683
7784 (g) The Climate Insurance Report highlighted that California has a widening insurance protection gap, leaving communities more exposed to financial costs and less able to recover from climate-fueled disasters. Accelerating climate risks threaten insurance affordability and availability, making it more difficult for people and communities to recover. Households, businesses, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured and reliant on government relief face a slow and challenging rebuilding process that can exacerbate existing inequalities.
7885
7986 (h) Consequently, the Climate Insurance Report urged the state to build more capacity for strong and equitable recovery from climate disasters by investing in innovative approaches to insurance that will expand access, close the protection gap, and protect individuals and communities from the physical and financial risks of climate change.
8087
81-12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature Senate Committee on Insurance and the Assembly Committee on Insurance on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
88+12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:(1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.(2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.(3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.(4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.(5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.(6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.(7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
8289
8390
8491
8592 12946. (a) The department shall establish and administer the Climate and Sustainability Insurance and Risk Reduction Grant Program, to be funded upon appropriation by the Legislature, for the purpose of achieving the following goals:
8693
8794 (1) Develop proofs of concept that expand insurance options through the use of insurance mechanisms, including community-based insurance and parametric insurance, to shrink the protection gap in vulnerable and disadvantaged communities that are most exposed to climate risks.
8895
8996 (2) Explore innovative approaches to insurance that build economic resilience, with particular focus on geographic locations subject to extreme heat, wildfire risk, flooding, or biodiversity loss, and communities that are uninsured or underinsured where insurance uptake is low.
9097
9198 (3) Test community-purchased insurance to reduce overall insurance costs, paired with risk reduction activities that may be funded by other agencies.
9299
93100 (4) Support projects that incorporate nature-based solutions to achieve both risk reduction and enhanced ecosystem services.
94101
95102 (5) Support projects that emphasize regional-scale and community-scale approaches to reducing risk.
96103
97104 (6) Create climate resilience districts, in accordance with Division 6 (commencing with Section 62300) of Title 6 of the Government Code.
98105
99106 (7) Educate communities on the role insurance can play in preparing for catastrophic climate events, as well as building resilience in the aftermath of those events.
100107
101-(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature Senate Committee on Insurance and the Assembly Committee on Insurance on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
108+(b) On or before January 1, 2029, and on or before January 1 every three years thereafter, the department shall issue a report to the Legislature on the results of the grant program and the opportunities for the lessons learned to strengthen the states approach to climate resilience. The report shall be submitted in compliance with Section 9795 of the Government Code.
102109
103110 12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.
104111
105112
106113
107114 12947. This article shall remain in effect only until January 1, 2035, and as of that date is repealed.
115+
116+
117+
118+
119+
120+When an insurer obtains reinsurance, they must communicate all the representations of the original insured, and also all the knowledge and information they possess, whether previously or subsequently acquired, that are material to the risk.