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U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Treasury’s Federal Insurance Office Takes Important Step to
Assess Climate-related Financial Risk – Seeks Comment on
Proposed Data Call
October 18, 2022

WASHINGTON – Today, the U.S. Department of the Treasury’s Federal Insurance Office (FIO)
issued a proposed data collection from insurers to assess climate-related financial risk across
the United States. FIO is seeking public input on a proposed collection of data from property
and casualty insurers regarding current and historical underwriting data on homeowners’
insurance.
The data collection would be aggregated at the ZIP Code level for a specific subset of insurers
and would not involve data on individual homeowners or other insured entities. The proposal
represents a critical step toward supplying FIO with consistent, granular, and comparable
insurance data needed to help assess the potential for major disruptions of private insurance
coverage in regions of the country that are particularly vulnerable to the impacts of climate
change. The proposed data collection would also help FIO’s work to assess both the availability
of insurance for millions of Americans as well as the affordability of such insurance.
“Today’s action by the Federal Insurance Office is an important step in determining how
Americans are being affected by the increasing costs of climate change,” said Secretary of the
Treasury Janet L. Yellen. “The recent impacts in Florida from Hurricane Ian demonstrate the
critical nature of this work and the need for an increased understanding of insurance market
vulnerabilities in the United States. FIO’s data collection will add to the work of regulators and
policymakers across the Administration to assess climate-related risks to the financial system,
the U.S. economy, and the American people.”
The comments submitted by the public will inform FIO’s work in responding to President
Biden’s Executive Order on Climate-related Financial Risk, EO 14030 (May 20, 2021).
Underscoring the important role of the insurance sector in responding to climate-related
financial risks, EO 14030 called for FIO to “assess, in consultation with States, the potential for
major disruptions of private insurance coverage in regions of the country particularly vulnerable
to climate change impacts.” On August 31, 2021, FIO outlined its priorities with regard to

climate-related financial risk in a request for information on the insurance sector and climaterelated financial risks. The data collection proposed today is another step in FIO’s continued
efforts in this area.
A copy of the request for public comments is available here
collection template is available here
collection is here

. A copy of the proposed data

. A copy of the instructions for the proposed data

. A copy of FIO’s August 2021 request for information is available here. For

more information on FIO, see here.