California’s Sustainable Insurance Strategy: A Proactive Approach
California Insurance Commissioner Ricardo Lara has launched the state’s Sustainable Insurance Strategy. This initiative aims to make sure there’s a healthy insurance market for consumers, homeowners, and businesses while also making sure it lasts long-term. The strategy is all about protecting Californians from the effects of climate change.

This strategy tackles a lot of issues: insurance availability, market strength, and protecting communities from climate change impacts.
The Strategy’s Origins
This plan is a response to the climate crisis, rising costs, and the specific challenges faced by California’s insurance market.
Goals of the Strategy
The strategy has three main goals:
- Make insurance accessible: Ensure insurance is available and affordable, especially in areas at high risk from climate change.
- Build a strong market: Make sure the insurance market is strong enough to handle climate change and economic ups and downs. This means keeping the market stable and helping it manage challenges.
- Protect communities: Take steps to protect communities from climate change impacts like wildfires and natural disasters.
Improving Insurance Availability
One key part of the plan involves getting insurance companies to commit to writing at least 85% of their statewide market share in areas that don’t have enough insurance and face wildfire risks. This helps get people out of the FAIR Plan and back into the regular market, expanding their options.
How the 85% Commitment Works
Insurance companies must write a certain amount of policies in wildfire-distressed areas. The Department of Insurance will keep an eye on this. Companies that don’t meet the commitment will either have to fix it or face enforcement, potentially including dealing with charging too much.
Safer from Wildfires Regulation
The “Safer from Wildfires” regulation is a part of the strategy. It makes sure homes and businesses that follow safety rules get priority in the regular insurance market. This encourages safety measures and makes insurance easier to get for those who make the effort.

Catastrophe Modeling
Catastrophe modeling is key because it helps insurance companies accurately assess and price climate-related risks accurately, particularly in relation to wildfires. California wants to use these models to make sure insurance rates reflect the benefits of investing in safety and reducing the risk of wildfires. This ensures pricing is related to safety.
- Climate-Related Risks: The strategy will use forward-looking catastrophe models that give weight to wildfire safety. These models reflect the benefits of things like making homes safer and controlled burns. Insurance prices will be directly tied to investments in wildfire safety.
Reinsurance Costs
California is going to look closely at using only California’s reinsurance costs in rate calculations. This is to help ensure that Californians are not paying for disasters that happen in other states.
Enforcement and Timeline
The Department of Insurance will closely monitor and enforce these changes. The goal is to get everything in place by December 2024.
How to Get Involved
Commissioner Lara wants people to get involved. Anyone can share their thoughts through meetings and provide input on the regulatory process.
Distinctions from Florida’s Approach
California’s plan differs from Florida’s because it emphasizes that insurance companies write more policies in California. The models are designed to work for our state’s specific risks, not just copy other states’ approaches.
Addressing Key Challenges
The main challenges California faces are climate change, affordability, and making sure insurance is readily available. The strategy deals with these by encouraging wildfire safety, using catastrophe modeling, and pushing insurance companies to insure in riskier areas. This should make things better for Californians.
