In the first ever Lloyd’s City Risk Index, analyzes the economic output at risk (GDP at risk) in 301 major cities from 18 manmade and natural threats over a ten-year period.

The Index is based on original research by the Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies at the University of Cambridge Judge Business School. It concludes that “a total of $4.6 trillion of projected GDP is at risk from manmade and natural disasters in these cities around the world.”

Lloyd’s explained that it “produced this Index to help increase the understanding of, and shape the world’s response to, the shifting risk landscape.” It aims to stimulate “further discussions between insurers, governments and businesses on the need to improve resilience, mitigate risk and protect infrastructure.

Globally, the Index identifies three important emerging trends in the global risk landscape, which are listed as follows:
1. Emerging economies will shoulder two-thirds of risk related financial losses as a result of their accelerating economic growth, with their cities often highly exposed to single natural catastrophes.
2. Manmade risks such as market crash, power outages and nuclear accidents are becoming increasingly significant, associated with almost half the total GDP at risk. A market crash is the greatest economic vulnerability – representing nearly a quarter of all cities’ potential losses.
3. New or emerging risks, such as cyber-attack, are also increasingly significant. Together, they account for more than a third of the total GDP at risk with just four – cyber-attack, human pandemic, plant epidemic and solar storm – representing more than a fifth of the total GDP at risk.

The findings reinforce the growing recognition that governments and businesses must “work together to build more resilient infrastructure and institutions. How quickly a city recovers after a catastrophe is a key component of the total risk, and the impact of events is mitigated by rapid access to capital to help restore the economy. “

Lloyd’s CEO Inga Beale commented: “Lloyd’s City Risk Index highlights the economic exposure of 301 major cities across the world. Governments and businesses, together with insurers, must work together to ensure that this exposure – and the potential for losses – is reduced.

“Insurers, governments, businesses and communities need to think about how they can improve the resilience of infrastructure and institutions. Insurance is part of the solution. Insurers must continue to innovate; ensure their products are relevant in this rapidly changing risk landscape, offer customers the protection they need and, as a result, contribute to a more resilient international community.”

Professor Daniel Ralph, Academic Director of Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies, added:
“This analysis for the Lloyd’s City Risk Index is the result of six years of research into catastrophic shocks on complex systems carried out at the Cambridge Centre for Risk Studies. It combines a detailed understanding of 18 different economic threats to the world’s most important cities.

“The measure GDP@Risk makes it possible to combine and compare a very wide range of threats, including those that are disruptive and costly, such as market collapse, in addition to destructive and deadly natural catastrophes.”

Source: Lloyd’s of London