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2005 — Hurricane Katrina

Event Date: August 29, 2005 Category: Hurricane • Flood • Levee Failure • NFIP • Reinsurance • Catastrophe Modeling • Market Stress • Climate Risk • Government Response

Summary

Hurricane Katrina was one of the deadliest and costliest natural disasters in U.S. history. Making landfall near New Orleans as a Category 3 hurricane, Katrina’s most catastrophic impacts came not from wind but from the failure of the federal levee system, which flooded 80% of New Orleans.

Katrina caused more than $65 billion in insured losses (2005 dollars) and over $160 billion in total economic losses. It exposed deep structural weaknesses in:

Katrina is a hinge event that reshaped the modern catastrophe‑risk landscape.

The Event: Wind, Surge, and Levee Failure

1. Landfall and Wind Damage

2. Storm Surge

3. Levee Failures in New Orleans

The defining catastrophe was the breach of federal levees, which caused:

4. Human Impact

Katrina was not just a hurricane — it was a compound disaster involving engineering failure, flood exposure, and systemic vulnerability.

Insurance Impact: A Market‑Changing Catastrophe

Katrina produced one of the largest insured losses in history.

1. Wind vs. Water Disputes

A defining insurance issue:

2. NFIP Overwhelmed

NFIP faced:

Katrina exposed the structural inadequacy of the U.S. flood‑insurance system.

3. Reinsurance Market Shock

Reinsurers faced:

4. Business Interruption & Contingent BI

Katrina produced unprecedented:

5. Market Withdrawals

Several insurers reduced Gulf Coast exposure, accelerating:

Regulatory Impact: Flood, Emergency Management, and Infrastructure Reform

1. NFIP Reform

Katrina triggered:

2. FEMA and Emergency‑Management Overhaul

Katrina exposed failures in:

Leading to major reforms in FEMA operations and federal disaster policy.

3. Levee and Infrastructure Investment

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers undertook:

4. State‑Level Insurance Reforms

Louisiana and Mississippi enacted:

Scientific & Technical Impact: A Turning Point for Catastrophe Modeling

Katrina exposed major weaknesses in pre‑2005 hurricane models:

This led to:

Katrina is one of the most important modeling‑driven inflection points in the industry.

Why It Matters in the Timeline

Hurricane Katrina is a hinge event because it:

This is the moment when insurers realized that U.S. hurricane risk is not just a wind peril — it is a multi‑peril, infrastructure‑dependent, systemic catastrophe exposure.

Related Entries

Directly Connected Gulf Coast & Hurricane Events

Flood Insurance & NFIP

Climate, Modeling & Scientific Context

Capital Markets, Reinsurance & Market Structure

Systemic & Policy Context

 

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