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2011 — Tōhoku Earthquake & Fukushima

Event Date: March 11, 2011 Category: Earthquake • Tsunami • Nuclear Accident • Supply Chain • Reinsurance • Catastrophe Modeling • Global Manufacturing • Business Interruption

Summary

The 2011 Tōhoku Earthquake & Fukushima Disaster was a magnitude 9.0 megathrust earthquake off the coast of Japan — the strongest ever recorded in the country — triggering a massive tsunami and the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear accident, one of the worst nuclear disasters in history.

The event caused:

Tōhoku is a hinge event that reshaped catastrophe modeling, nuclear‑risk frameworks, contingent‑business‑interruption underwriting, and global reinsurance markets.

The Event: A Triple Catastrophe

1. The Earthquake (M9.0)

2. The Tsunami

3. Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Disaster

This was a compound catastrophe: seismic + tsunami + technological failure.

Insurance Impact: A Global Stress Test

1. Massive Property & Business‑Interruption Losses

Japan’s high insurance penetration produced:

2. Contingent Business Interruption (CBI) Shock

The tsunami disrupted:

Insurers faced global CBI claims from companies with no physical presence in Japan.

This event redefined CBI underwriting.

3. Nuclear Exclusions Tested

Most commercial policies excluded nuclear contamination, shifting losses to:

4. Reinsurance Market Impact

Tōhoku was one of the largest reinsured events in history, triggering:

Regulatory Impact: Nuclear, Seismic, and Infrastructure Reform

1. Nuclear‑Safety Overhaul

Japan implemented sweeping reforms:

2. Building‑Code and Infrastructure Review

Japan already had world‑leading seismic codes, but Tōhoku prompted:

3. Global Nuclear Policy Shifts

Scientific & Technical Impact: A Turning Point in Catastrophe Modeling

Tōhoku exposed major gaps in pre‑2011 seismic and tsunami models.

1. Underestimation of Megathrust Potential

Models underestimated:

2. Multi‑Peril Modeling

The event forced modeling firms to integrate:

3. Global Supply‑Chain Modeling

Insurers and modelers began mapping:

This was the birth of modern supply‑chain catastrophe modeling.

Why It Matters in the Timeline

The Tōhoku & Fukushima disaster is a hinge event because it:

This is the moment when insurers realized that a single event can simultaneously trigger natural‑catastrophe, technological, environmental, and global‑supply‑chain losses.

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