Nov 12, 2024
Welcome to RIMScast. Your host is Justin Smulison, Business Content Manager at RIMS, the Risk and Insurance Management Society.
In this episode, Justin interviews Kevin Stein, the CEO of Delos Insurance Solutions. Kevin tells of his aerospace engineering background and how modeling led him to the insurance space. He speaks of his passion for insurance, and of co-founding Delos Insurance Solutions to fill the commercial coverage gap around California Wildfires. Kevin speaks of his optimism for the future of Wildfire control with property fire-hardening principles and new detection and deterrent technology.
Listen in for advice on hardening commercial properties against
wildfire risk, and how to secure coverage against this risk.
Key Takeaways:
[:01] About RIMS.
[:15] About this episode. From RIMS headquarters in New York, our guest today is Kevin Stein, the CEO of Delos Insurance and we will discuss wildfire risk.
[:39] The next RIMS-CRMP Exam Prep will be held with Purima virtually on November 14th and 15th. The next RIMS-CRMP-FED Exam Course will be hosted along with George Mason University from December 3rd through the 5th.
[:58] Links to these courses can be found on the Certifications page of RIMS.org and through this episode’s show notes.
[1:05] RIMS Virtual Workshops! “Risk Appetite Management” is back by popular demand. Registration closes November 19th for the session on November 20th and 21st. That session will be led by Ken Baker.
[1:20] Elise Farnham of Illumine Consulting recently joined us here on RIMScast. On December 4th and 5th, she will host “Applying and Integrating ERM”. On December 17th and 18th, she will host “Captives as an Alternate Risk Financing Technique”.
[1:37] Those are just three of the workshops RIMS offers; we have lots more! Other dates for the Fall and Winter are available on the Virtual Workshops calendar, RIMS.org/virtualworkshops.
[1:49] This is the last call to register for the RIMS ERM Conference 2024 which will be held on November 18‒19, 2024 in Boston, Massachusetts. The agenda is live, we’ve got a great keynote, and we’ve got so many fantastic educational sessions and networking opportunities for you!
[2:07] So visit the Events page of RIMS.org and register today! A link is also in this episode’s show notes.
[2:14] Interview! Climate change and wildfire risks are on our minds here at RIMScast! My take is that there is no longer a wildfire season here in the U.S., it’s just wildfire year. Let’s see if our guest agrees with me, and what risk managers can do to combat and mitigate this problem.
[2:39] My guest is Kevin Stein. He is the CEO of Delos Insurance Solutions and he is an aerospace engineer by training. We're going to get a fascinating perspective from him on wildfire risks and what risk professionals can do to limit their exposure.
[2:56] We’re also going to talk about the trends driving wildfire reduction techniques. Let’s get to it! Kevin Stein, welcome to RIMScast!
[3:21] Kevin and a Co-founder started Delos Insurance Solutions in 2017. It is a specialty MGA. They sell policies across California in areas that other insurers have vacated because of perceived wildfire exposure in those regions.
[3:40] Delos Insurance Solutions is in partnership with an environment think tank made up of 100 professors, post-doc scientists, and the top wildfire researchers in the world.
[99] They have co-developed the civil government models for agencies including CalFire, the Public Utilities Commission, and the U.S. Forestry Service, for 25 years.
[4:04] With the think tank, Delos Insurance Solutions has developed more sophisticated wildfire underwriting internal tools and models that give a sense of a per-risk view of wildfire exposure as well as a portfolio-level view of wildfire exposure.
[4:19] With that, Delos Insurance Solutions has developed a number of programs. They sell home insurance, landlord’s insurance, and vacant home insurance across California.
[4:33] Kevin tells about his experience as an aerospace engineer. He did his Master’s in Aerospace Engineering at Stanford. He started on the modeling side and found his way into insurance.
[4:56] Kevin finds insurance fascinating. He says that everybody in the industry understands how interesting insurance is and everybody outside the insurance industry does not. Having gone from outside the industry to inside it, Kevin says the people in the industry are correct.
[5:13] Kevin says there are many different, interesting aspects of insurance and his career has been a wild ride.
[5:40] Kevin says the reality of wildfire season is that wildfires can happen at any time. There need to be specific conditions for these fires to become large, destructive wildfires. Conditions need to be hot, dry, and windy and there needs to be fuel.
[6:01] The seasons have been changing. In California, the wildfire seasons in 2017 and 2018 were very destructive. Historically, Northern California has a rainy season from mid-October through late March or early April. In 2017 they had sun through the end of December and rain until June.
[6:43] During the Fall, Northern California has a lake effect of winds coming over the mountains out to the ocean, and it’s usually stormy. In 2017 and 2018, they had 100-degree temperatures, the vegetation had been dry for six months, and the extreme winds led to fire superstorms.
[7:11] In any wildfire area, once sustained rains start, you’re in a more comfortable position. You need vegetation that’s been dried out for a while to have large fire superstorms but even in the Spring or early Summer, you can have individual or smaller fires that threaten your properties.
[7:37] The antidote to smaller, individual fires is to implement property-hardening techniques on commercial properties that effectively protect structures against smaller, slower-moving fires.
[8:25] Fires are spreading. The Salem, Massachusetts fires, the Eastern Canada fires, the Hawaiian fires, the fires in Oklahoma, and in San Diego show that fires can happen in a lot of geographies now that have not experienced fires before.
[8:59] This has a big effect on the insurance market. Insurers and reinsurers are looking at the spread and prevalence of wildfires and getting more concerned about what that means for their average exposure and maximum exposure.
[9:18] The price of re-insurance is going up significantly and the availability of re-insurance and capacity is going down significantly.
[9:28] The key for folks who own properties and large buildings and who rely on risk transfer as an effective means for managing their risk, is to be more creative and find more specialty groups.
[9:49] The insurance industry is morphing. The previous structure included wildfire exposure with hurricane exposure and tornado exposure. Now many of them will exclude wildfire.
[10:16] Risk managers will have to find specialty groups that are underwriting wildfire exposure more effectively and capturing re-insurance capacity more effectively to provide policies for people with this exposure.
[10:40] A key to understanding your fire exposure is
to understand what type of fires you are potentially exposed to.
There are wind-driven fire locations, moisture-driven fire
locations, and vegetation-driven fire locations.
[10:58] To harden your property to vegetation fires, make the area
around your building either a parking lot or drought-resistant,
fire-resistant landscaping. Don’t use bark or woodchips. You can
have small scattered plants surrounded by concrete to avoid the
risk of vegetation fire.
[11:50] With wind-driven fires, your biggest risk is embers. Embers can catch a building on fire by igniting vegetation at the base of the structure, so remove all vegetation against the structure or under eaves, especially with single-story structures.
[12:20] Embers can also get inside structures. Have ember-mesh screens on air intakes, such as those used by the HVAC system, and any openings in the foundation and your eaves.
[13:03] Build structures out of fire-resistant materials. Shingles and siding need to be fire-resistant or fire-safe. Use double-pane windows. Single-pane windows crack in fires and embers can get in. Use ember-mesh screens.
[13:59] For landscaping, make sure it is drought-resistant and fire-resistant.
[13:52] Plug Time! RIMS Webinars! On November 14th, Marsh will present “Risk Perception and Management: Insights for a Changing Landscape”.
[14:03] On November 21st, HUB International returns with the fourth installment of their Ready for Tomorrow series, “From AI to the SEC: The Future of D&O Litigation and Regulatory Exposures”.
[14:17] On November 25th, Resolver returns to discuss “The Future of Risk & Compliance: 5 Key Insights for the Modern Leader”.
[14:26] On December 5th, we have “Predictive Strategies to Detect Electrical and Machinery Failures”, presented by Global Risk Consultants, a TÜV SÜD company.
[14:37] On Thursday, December 12th, OneTrust returns to deliver “Staying Vigilant: 7 Practical Tips for Ongoing Third-Party Risk Monitoring”.
[14:47] More webinars will be announced soon and added to the RIMS.org/webinars page. Go there to register. Registration is complimentary for RIMS members.
[14:59] RIMS is now accepting nominations for all awards other than Risk Manager of the Year 2025. The submission deadline is Monday, January 6th, 2025. To receive a RIMS award, all winners must be active members and in good standing.
[15:19] The awards are the Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Chapter Leadership Award, the Harry and Dorothy Goodell Award, the Volunteer of the Year “Heart of RIMS” Award, the Richard W. Bland Memorial Award, the Chapter of the Year Award, the Rising Risk Professional Award, the Risk Management Hall of Fame, and the Cristy Award.
[15:57] You can find more information about the awards through the About Us page of RIMS.org or the link in this interview’s show notes.
[16:06] Back to My Interview About Wildfire Risks with Kevin Stein!
[16:36] Kevin has a really optimistic view of the future of wildfire risk. A lot of that has to do with firefighting strategies and resources. The California government has put massive amounts of money into forest management and it’s been very effective.
[17:01] Kevin is optimistic about the new technology. Improved outdoor sprinklers are triggered if a fire is oncoming and douse everything in water or fire-retardant material. Sensors are put in different locations to recognize fire quickly.
[17:39] How fast firefighters get to a wildfire is hugely important in terms of how big the fire will be. Fires that are reached and controlled quickly don’t become giant superstorms. Giant superstorms cause significant loss and burn down large buildings. Small wildfires can’t do that.
[18:07] The sensors are put on a variety of buildings to recognize smoke automatically with computer vision AI built in. Some longer-term technology is very interesting. In the future, there will be drone armies to replace the helicopters to pour fire retardant or water on top of wildfires.
[19:10] Commercial clients can deal with re-insurers like Lloyd’s of London to get coverage. Property-hardening characteristics and technologies come into play with a detailed assessment of the defensibility of the structure.
[20:38] Wildfire Re-insurers are moving from being generalists to being specialists. Generalist actuaries study years of loss history to predict losses for the next year. Specialist perils require area expertise because the risks cannot be handled simply through large amounts of data.
[21:13] Cyber is a great example of this. Cyber insurance was first bundled with general liability. The carriers soon realized they had no expertise to predict cyber risk so they excluded it. Specialty groups with expertise popped up to fill the gap in the market.
[21:36] This has happened with flood insurance, hurricane insurance in Florida, and earthquake insurance. Wildfire is the next one. It’s changing very rapidly. It’s very complicated, so you need people with area expertise to be able to underwrite it profitably.
[21:58] There is a trend where primary carriers are pulling back. They’re making the sound decision for a risk manager who can’t understand a peril. This opens up space for specialists to jump in, like Delos Insurance Solutions. Kevin says more groups will show up to serve the sector.
[22:54] Kevin reveals some of his aerospace engineer experience. He put in a proposal to NASA for a heliocentric spacecraft to look for life on Alpha Centauri. That wasn’t chosen, but there was an interesting satellite project he worked on.
[23:35] Kevin helped create two NBN satellites to provide internet to all of Australia, combined with a detailed fiber network. Kevin managed everything mechanical on the build of those two satellites.
[24:25] Special thanks again to Kevin Stein of Delos Insurance Solutions for joining us today on RIMScast. RIMS has a Wildfire Resources Page on RIMS.org. A link is in this interview’s show notes. Be sure to go there for more insight and information on how you can combat wildfire risk.
[24:44] More RIMS Plugs! The RIMS App is available to RIMS members exclusively. Go to the App Store and download the RIMS App with all sorts of RIMS resources and coverage. It’s different from the RIMS Events App. Everyone loves the RIMS App!
[25:18] You can sponsor a RIMScast episode for this, our weekly show, or a dedicated episode. Links to sponsored episodes are in our show notes. RIMScast has a global audience of risk and insurance professionals, legal professionals, students, business leaders, C-Suite executives, and more. Let’s collaborate and help you reach them! Contact pd@rims.org for more information.
[26:00] Become a RIMS member and get access to the tools, thought leadership, and network you need to succeed. Visit RIMS.org/membership or email membershipdept@RIMS.org for more information.
[26:17] Risk Knowledge is the RIMS searchable content library that provides relevant information for today’s risk professionals. Materials include RIMS executive reports, survey findings, contributed articles, industry research, benchmarking data, and more.
[26:33] For the best reporting on the profession of risk management, read Risk Management Magazine at RMMagazine.com. It is written and published by the best minds in risk management.
[26:46] Justin Smulison is the Business Content Manager at RIMS. You can email Justin at Content@RIMS.org.
[26:53] Thank you all for your continued support and engagement on social media channels! We appreciate all your kind words. Listen every week! Stay safe!
Mentioned in this Episode:
RIMS-Certified Risk Management Professional (RIMS-CRMP)
RIMS Strategic & Enterprise Risk Center
RIMS ERM Conference 2024 — November 18‒19, 2024 | Boston, MA
NEW FOR MEMBERS! RIMS Mobile App
RIMS-CRMP Stories — Featuring Valerie Fox!
Nominations open for RIMS 2025 Awards! (Through Jan. 6, 2025)
Nominations for the Donald M. Stuart Award
RIMS Webinars:
“Risk Perception and Management: Insights for a Changing Landscape” | Sponsored by Marsh | Nov. 14, 2024
“From AI to the SEC: The Future of D&O Litigation and Regulatory Exposures” | Sponsored by Hub International | Nov. 21, 2024
“The Future of Risk & Compliance: 5 Key Insights for the Modern Leader’ | Sponsored by Resolver | Nov. 25, 2024
“Predictive Strategies to Detect Electrical and Machinery Failures” | Sponsored by TUV SUD GRC | Dec. 5, 2024
“Staying Vigilant: 7 Practical Tips for Ongoing Third-Party Risk Monitoring” | Sponsored by OneTrust | Dec. 12, 2024
Upcoming Virtual Workshops:
Risk Appetite Management Nov. 20‒21
RIMS-CRMP Exam Prep (Virtual)
Dec. 17‒18, 2024 | 9:00
am‒4:00 pm EST — Register by Dec. 10.
“Applying and Integrating ERM” | Dec. 4‒5
“Captives as an Alternate Risk Financing Technique” | Dec. 17‒18
See the full calendar of RIMS Virtual Workshops
Related RIMScast Episodes:
“Safety and Preparedness in 2024 with National Safety Council CEO Lorraine Martin”
“Mitigating the Risks of Catastrophes with Mrunal Pandit of Tata Consumer Products”
“Evolving Fire Risks with Ralph Bless”
Sponsored RIMScast Episodes:
“Risk Management in a Changing World: A Deep Dive into AXA’s 2024 Future Risks Report” | Sponsored by AXA XL (New!)
“How Insurance Builds Resilience Against An Active Assailant Attack” | Sponsored by Merrill Herzog
“Third-Party and Cyber Risk Management Tips” | Sponsored by Alliant
“RMIS Innovation with Archer” | Sponsored by Archer
“Navigating Commercial Property Risks with Captives” | Sponsored by Zurich
“Breaking Down Silos: AXA XL’s New Approach to Casualty Insurance” | Sponsored by AXA XL
“Weathering Today’s Property Claims Management Challenges” | Sponsored by AXA XL
“Storm Prep 2024: The Growing Impact of Convective Storms and Hail” | Sponsored by Global Risk Consultants, a TÜV SÜD Company
“Partnering Against Cyberrisk” | Sponsored by AXA XL
“Harnessing the Power of Data and Analytics for Effective Risk
Management” | Sponsored by Marsh
“Accident Prevention — The Winning Formula For Construction and
Insurance” | Sponsored by Otoos
“Platinum Protection: Underwriting and Risk Engineering's Role in Protecting Commercial Properties” | Sponsored by AXA XL
“Elevating RMIS — The Archer Way” | Sponsored by Archer
“Alliant’s P&C Outlook For 2024” | Sponsored by Alliant
“Why Subrogation is the New Arbitration” | Sponsored by Fleet Response
“Cyclone Season: Proactive Preparation for Loss Minimization” | Sponsored by Prudent Insurance Brokers Ltd.
“Subrogation and the Competitive Advantage” | Sponsored by Fleet Response
RIMS Publications, Content, and Links:
RIMS Membership — Whether you are a new member or need to transition, be a part of the global risk management community!
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Sponsor RIMScast: Contact sales@rims.org or pd@rims.org for more information.
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About our guest:
Kevin
Stein, CEO of Delos
Insurance Solutions
Social Shareables (Edited For Social Media Use):
There are so many different, super-interesting aspects of insurance. — Kevin Stein
I have a really optimistic view of the future of wildfire risk. A lot of that has to do with firefighting strategies and resources. The California government has put massive amounts of money into forest management and it’s been very effective. — Kevin Stein
Sensors can be put in different locations to recognize fire quickly. How fast firefighters get to a wildfire is hugely important in terms of how big the fire will be. Fires that are reached and controlled quickly don’t become giant superstorms. — Kevin Stein
There is a trend where primary carriers are pulling back. They’re making the sound decision for a risk manager who can’t understand a peril. This opens up space for specialists like Delos Insurance Solutions to jump in. Other groups will follow. — Kevin Stein