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Monalisa Chatterjee has spent her career studying how humans adapt to extreme climate events such as tropical cyclones, urban floods and droughts. In recent years, the associate professor and graduate director of environmental studies has turned her focus to a climate trend that’s especially urgent in California: wildfires.
“The state has invested heavily in training its wildfire fighters and equipping them properly,” says Chatterjee. “California is also working with Indigenous communities to incorporate traditional forest management practices, like controlled burns, to reduce excess fuels.”
Over the last two decades, the number of large wildfires in California has surged, causing tragic loss of lives, homes, trees and wildlife. California has risen to the challenge, allocating billions to the Department of Forestry and Fire Protection (Cal Fire) and emerging as a leader in emergency response.
Chatterjee has identified a critical gap in wildfire management that remains despite these advances: the state’s fire insurance market. “When it comes to wildfires, insurance is failing to protect Californians from risk,” she says.
The devastating wildfires of 2017 and 2018 wiped out decades of profits for home insurance companies in California. In the aftermath, premiums have soared, forcing many homeowners to forego fire insurance and leaving them vulnerable to financial disaster. Many insurers have refused to renew policies for homes in high-risk areas, while others have exited the state altogether.
Such cooperative actions can drive insurance innovation, helping to mitigate property loss and reduce the economic risks borne by insurance companies.
“Wildfires present an excellent opportunity to develop a collective approach to risk management,” says Chatterjee. “We can incentivize people to make neighborhood improvements that make it less likely a wildfire will spread, which in turn will reduce insurance premiums and make policies more affordable.”
The clock is ticking; as climate change leads to hotter, drier conditions and human development continues to encroach on forested areas, the wildfire risk keeps growing.
Yet, Chatterjee remains pragmatic. “We have to find a way of coexisting with fires,” she says.