The weekend winter storm that impacted more than 200 million p
eople from more than 24 states is expected to result in total damage and economic losses of between $105 billion and $115 billion, said AccuWeather.
The preliminary loss estimate accounts for damage to homes and businesses, disruptions to commerce and supply chain l
ogistics, tourism losses, impacts to shipping operations at major hubs, finan
cial losses from extended power outages, major travel delays, as well as
damage to infrastructure, said the weather forecaster.
AccuWeather said it has independent methods to evaluate all direct
and indirect impacts of the storm, which include both insured and uninsur
d losses. It includes damage to property, job and wage losses, crops, infrastructure, interruption of the supply chain, auxiliary busines
s losses, flight delays, and other costs from the storm.
“The scope of this winter storm was extraordinary. What sets this storm ap
art is not just the snow and ice, but how widespread the disruption has been across transportation, energy, commerce and daily l
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ife,” AccuWeather Chief Meteorologist Jonathan Porter said. “The extreme cold pouring in behind the storm dramatically increase
s risks and slows recovery in many of the hardest-hit areas.”
Jasper Cooper, vice president and senior credit officer at Moody’s Rating’s, said insured losses from the winter storm Fern will be in the billions of dollars.
“To date, the largest winter storm by insured losses was the 2021 Texas free
ze at $18 billion according to industry estimates,” Cooper said. “In recent years, homeowners and commercial property
insurers have raised rates and changed policy terms to cover growth in losses from nonpeak perils such as winter storms.”
AccuWeather said dangerously cold Arctic air in the wake of the storm is expected to complicate recovery and power restoration
efforts in some areas.
“Prolonged freezing temperatures increase the likelihood of secondary damage, including frozen pipes, structural issues an
d additional business interruptions long after the storm has passed,” Porter added.






























