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Insurance-Grade Construction: What Carriers Are Rewarding

Insurance-Grade Construction: What Carriers Are Rewarding

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EPISODE DESCRIPTION Insurers have stopped only pricing damage after the fact and started rewarding resilience before it—turning “insurance-grade” into a construction spec —and host Jamie Wolf reads this brief squarely for the supply side. In a nearly $400 trillion global real estate market, what a carrier will insure, and on what terms, increasingly dictates what a developer specifies, a builder builds, and a manufacturer makes. The proof the spec works is now in the claims data: a peer-reviewed University of Alabama study of more than 40,000 coastal-Alabama properties found FORTIFIED roofs took 63% less roof damage in Hurricane Sally, with FORTIFIED Roof homes filing 73% fewer claims and 72% lower total losses — exactly the evidence a carrier can put in a rate filing. Capital is following, with McKinsey sizing the climate-resilience-technology market at $600 billion to $1 trillion by 2030. Three forces are arriving together: insurability as the new procurement filter, building codes catching up to the carrier, and tariffs and shipping setting the cost of compliance. Section 232 duties at 50% have pushed U.S. hot-rolled steel coil above $1,200 a metric ton, more than double that in Southeast Asia. The takeaway: build to what the carrier rewards, because it's becoming what the market requires. Ships with a CRDF Signal Tracker.Episode SummaryCarriers are turning “insurance-grade” into a construction spec, rewarding resilience before damage occurs — and the FORTIFIED claims data gives them evidence they can price. For the supply side, the product that earns a carrier credit (or simply stays insurable) wins the bid, while the uninsurable one is designed out. Build to what the carrier rewards, because it is becoming what the market requires.Key TakeawaysInsurers are rewarding resilience before loss, not just pricing damage after the fact, making “insurance-grade” a construction spec that flows up the supply chain into what gets specified, built, and manufactured.The proof is in observed claims: a peer-reviewed University of Alabama (CRIR) study of 40,000+ coastal Alabama properties found FORTIFIED roofs sustained 63% less roof damage during Hurricane Sally; FORTIFIED Roof homes filed 73% fewer claims and incurred 72% lower total losses (Gold: 76% / 67%).Capital is following the evidence: McKinsey sizes the climate-resilience-technology addressable market at $600 billion to $1 trillion by 2030 (7–11% annual growth).Force 1 — insurability is the new procurement filter (S1): the uninsurable product is removed from the catalog. Force 2 — code is catching up to the carrier (S9). Force 3 — tariffs/shipping set the cost of compliance (S12).Cost of compliance is real and uneven: Section 232 steel/aluminum tariffs at 50%; steel products PPI ~+13% YoY; materials +6% vs 2024 and project costs ~ +3 % (Cushman & Wakefield); U.S. hot-rolled coil >$1,200/mt vs ~$570 in Southeast Asia.“Earning a career credit” is becoming concrete and testable — listed assembly, wind/impact rating, tested fire performance, and an EPD — documentation that an underwriter's model can ingest.Takeaway: specify, certify, and lock your supply chain to the carrier-rewarded standard before the code —and the carrier makes it mandatory— so the supplier who can deliver the compliant product at a predictable landed cost owns the spec.YOU MAKE OUR SHOW BETTER BY BEING INVOLVED!Subscribe to Climate-Ready Real Estate Investing on your favorite podcast app (Spotify, Apple Podcasts, etc.).Follow us on LinkedIn /in/jamieclausswolf and Twitter @jamie_wolfCRREI for weekly episodes and market intelligence.Get the CRDF Signal Tracker™ and the CRDF Deal Stress Test™: Head to ClimateReadyRE.com, subscribe, and open your emailWant to be a guest on the show? Register at www.climatereadyre.com/guest-registration.Next episode: Underwriting the Upgrade: Adaptation CapEx as an AssetReferences & Sources CitedFORTIFIED roofs took 63% less roof damage in Hurricane Sally — IBHS, 2025. https://ibhs.org/ibhs-news-releases/study-shows-ibhss-fortified-program-reduced-hurricane-sally-damage/Peer-reviewed FORTIFIED claims/loss outcomes (73% fewer claims, 72% lower losses; Gold 76% / 67%; 40,000+ properties) — CRIR / Univ. of Alabama Culverhouse, May 2025. https://culverhouse.ua.edu/news/2025/05/crir-study-reveals-hurricane-sallys-effects-on-fortified-homes/Climate-resilience technology = $600B–$1T addressable market by 2030 — McKinsey, 2025. https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/sustainability/our-insights/climate-resilience-technology-an-inflection-point-for-new-investmentBoards treat insurability as a business-continuity input — World Economic Forum, December 2025. https://www.weforum.org/stories/2025/12/how-innovative-insurance-products-and-services-help-boards-ensure-business-resilience/Climate resilience as core risk management — Chubb, 2025. https://about.chubb.com/stories/...
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