1987 — AIR Worldwide and the Birth of Commercial Catastrophe Modeling
Category: Property • Reinsurance • Analytics • Technology • Catastrophe Risk
Summary
In 1987, Karen Clark founded Applied Insurance Research (AIR) — the company that would become AIR Worldwide. That same year, AIR released CATMAP, the first commercial catastrophe‑loss analysis system ever used by insurers and reinsurers.
This was the moment catastrophe modeling became a formal discipline rather than an academic curiosity. AIR’s founding marks the beginning of modern, probabilistic cat modeling — the foundation of today’s global property‑catastrophe market.
I. The Founding of AIR (1987)
Karen Clark, a trained economist and catastrophe‑risk pioneer, founded AIR in Boston in 1987. Her goal was radical for its time:
Use computer simulation to estimate catastrophic losses before they occur.
This was the first attempt to commercialize catastrophe modeling for the insurance industry.
II. CATMAP: The First Commercial Catastrophe Model
Later in 1987, AIR released CATMAP, the first catastrophe‑loss analysis system available to insurers and reinsurers.
CATMAP introduced:
- event catalogs
- hazard footprints
- vulnerability curves
- portfolio‑level loss estimation
For the first time, insurers could quantify potential losses from hurricanes and earthquakes using probabilistic simulation rather than intuition or historical averages.
This was the birth of:
- EP curves
- AAL (Average Annual Loss)
- tail‑risk metrics
All of which are now standard in underwriting and reinsurance.
III. The Turning Point: Hurricane Andrew (1992)
AIR’s early models were validated dramatically when Hurricane Andrew struck Florida in 1992.
AIR estimated insured losses could exceed $13 billion, a figure widely dismissed at the time — but later proven accurate.
Andrew caused:
- more than 10 insurer insolvencies
- a reinsurance‑capacity crisis
- a surge in demand for scientific modeling
This event transformed AIR from a niche analytics firm into a central pillar of the global cat‑risk ecosystem.
IV. AIR’s Evolution
AIR remained privately held until it was acquired by ISO in 2002, later becoming part of Verisk Analytics.
Over time, AIR expanded into:
- global hurricane, earthquake, flood, and severe‑storm models
- terrorism and pandemic modeling
- casualty‑catastrophe and cyber modeling
- enterprise risk management platforms (e.g., Touchstone)
In 2022, AIR rebranded under Verisk Extreme Event Solutions.
V. Legacy
AIR’s founding in 1987 marks the beginning of the modern catastrophe‑modeling era. It transformed:
- underwriting
- reinsurance pricing
- capital allocation
- regulatory solvency standards
- the rise of ILS and cat bonds
AIR didn’t just build models. It created the framework for how the global insurance industry understands extreme events.
Related Entries
Foundational Modeling Milestones & Scientific Origins
- 1980s — Birth of Catastrophe Modeling (AIR, RMS, EQE) — the broader scientific movement that AIR formalized into a commercial discipline
- 1988 — RMS Founding — AIR’s closest peer and eventual competitor, expanding the field into multi‑peril global modeling
- 1990s — Rise of Probabilistic Risk Assessment — the analytical frameworks (EP curves, AAL, tail metrics) that AIR pioneered and the industry later adopted universally
Catastrophe Events That Validated AIR’s Models
- 1992 — Hurricane Andrew — the event that proved AIR’s modeled loss estimates were far more accurate than historical methods, cementing AIR as indispensable
- 1994 — Northridge Earthquake — another validation moment that forced rapid updates to earthquake vulnerability curves and hazard assumptions
- 1984 — Bhopal Gas Disaster — an industrial catastrophe that highlighted the need for modeling beyond natural hazards, a direction AIR later expanded into (terrorism, pandemic, cyber)
Reinsurance, Capital Markets & Global Market Transformation
- 1990s — Bermuda Reinsurer Boom — the Class of ’93 reinsurers adopted AIR models from inception, making AIR the analytical backbone of the new Bermuda market
- 1990s — Rise of Cat Bonds & ILS — AIR’s EP curves and hazard footprints became essential components of early cat‑bond trigger structures
- 1990s — Reinsurance Capacity Crisis (forthcoming) — the shortage of traditional reinsurance capital that accelerated AIR’s adoption across the industry
Regulation, Solvency & Risk‑Based Capital Evolution
- 2015 — Solvency II Implementation — AIR’s probabilistic outputs became embedded in European solvency and capital‑adequacy frameworks
- 2010s — Global Systemic‑Risk Regulation — regulators increasingly relied on catastrophe‑model outputs for systemic‑risk monitoring
- 1990s — Regulatory Adoption of Cat Models (forthcoming) — the period when state regulators began referencing AIR/RMS outputs in rate filings and solvency reviews
Parallel Scientific, Engineering & Analytical Developments
- 1993 — Daubert v. Merrell Dow — reshaped scientific‑evidence standards and pushed catastrophe‑modeling firms toward greater transparency, peer review, and methodological rigor
- 1990s — Predictive Analytics Emerges — the broader data‑science revolution that paralleled AIR’s rise in catastrophe modeling
- 1990s — Multi‑Peril Global Model Expansion (forthcoming) — AIR’s transition from hurricane and earthquake to terrorism, pandemic, cyber, and casualty‑cat modeling