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Typhoon-prone Philippines plans to launch an insurance plan to indemnify damages to infrastructure by natural disasters

  • About 2 billion pesos (US$37 million) to cover the payment of a premium is being proposed for the 2024 national budget, said National Treasurer Rosalia de Leon
  • The Philippines received a US$52.5 million payout, or 35 per cent of the principal, from a World Bank-issued catastrophe bond after Typhoon Rai hit in December 2021

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A flooded road in Valenzuela City in Metro Manila, on 27 July 2023 after typhoon Doksuri brought torrential rain. Photo: EPA-EFE

The Philippines, recovering from damage wrought by Typhoon Doksuri, is seeking a new insurance plan as protection against future calamities after its catastrophe bond lapsed.

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“We no longer have a cat bond,” National Treasurer Rosalia de Leon said in reply to a query via mobile phone on Thursday. “We are proposing a national indemnity programme in 2024,” she said.

About 2 billion pesos (US$37 million) to cover the payment of a premium is being proposed for the 2024 national budget, De Leon said.

The Philippines received a US$52.5 million payout, or 35 per cent of the principal, from a World Bank-issued catastrophe bond after Typhoon Rai hit in December 2021. That bond, issued in 2019, lapsed last year.

The proposed new insurance plan is intended to protect the Southeast Asian nation from infrastructure losses caused by natural disasters. It seeks to provide financial protection for strategically important assets like school buildings, hospitals, roads and bridges to ensure immediate funding for the repair of those critical assets.

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On average, the Philippines is expected to incur US$3.5 billion in asset losses annually from typhoons and earthquakes alone, according to the World Bank. The country is hit by an average of 20 typhoons every year.

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