Title: UK Fire Losses An Insurer Perspective
1UK Fire Losses An Insurer Perspective
- Douglas Barnett
- Head of Customer Risk Management
- 13th July 2009
2Fire and Rescue Service Reforms
- They were generally welcomed by insurance
industry and seen as a necessity to drive
modernisation - They have assisted in many ways including
specialist training and response to current risks
such as terrorism and flooding. - They looked to drive fire safety management onto
the employers agenda - They ensured individual Fire Rescue Services
were managed as a professional business.
3What is our current view?
- Concerned that the changes to fire safety may
have gone to far and are being detrimental to the
well being of UK business communities. - We have been previously accused of scaremongering
and asked to provide evidence we now have a
growing folder of incidents and research reports. - Business owners regularly comment that insurers
are the only stakeholder providing advice. - Recession will impact fully in 24/36 months as
the result of business cuts and reduction in
maintenance are seen. - Personal View
- It is only a matter of time now before a serious
loss of life occurs in a commercial or
residential building.
4Large Losses
- Frequency is similar to previous years however
financial loss is increasing at alarming rate - Buildings where previously damage may have been
limited could now be total loss. - Fire Fighters are advising that they are
attending fires where they either do not have
knowledge, manpower or immediate accessibility to
resource. - RISC Authority report now complete and issued to
all FRS and stakeholders for information.
5Modern Methods of Construction
- Massive growth in MMC in city centre and urban
blocks of flats - No large scale testing of materials or systems
has been conducted. - Regular use of combustible materials to deliver
compliance with environmental requirements. - Buy to let resulted in massive construction
programme by private developers. - We now have evidence that these structures may
have been poorly designed and/or constructed
and poor maintenance has yet to start!
6MMC continued
- Basic elements of passive fire protection are
being found to be missing - Small single compartment fires are spreading
between floors and compartments - Fire fighters are at a loss as to how adequately
to tackle these incidents - Who are auditing the approved inspectors our
audits have all been after multi-million fires
and concern is growing.
7Sprinklers Whats the UKs Issue?
- They save life
- They save property
- They save jobs
- HOWEVER
- We are reducing fire cover closing fire
stations - We have longer attendance times for fire crews
to reach incidents - We have different response between neighbouring
Fire and Rescue Services - We have more traffic congestion in our towns and
cities during working hours.
8Sprinklers Whats the UKs Issue?
- They could save communities if you examine the
true economic cost of fire. - They perform consistently to their design
parameters. - They are accepted across the world as integral
part of fire safety design. - Architects still complain (and more worryingly
believe) they result in extensive water damage
when activate. - They are being actively designed out of some of
our largest and most complex buildings.
9Sprinklers whats the UKs Problem?
- We have massive distribution warehouses with no
fire compartmentation. - We are ignoring automatic fire alarms signals
and refusing to attend unless an employee goes
and finds the fire and then confirms to fire
control centre - Although principally applying to commercial and
not public authority buildings - Community fire safety doesnt target commercial
business - Are Businesses not an integral part of the
community? - Fewer buildings are inspected by any independent
auditor or assessor - Fire brigade presence is negligible if at all
unless you are in one of the very largest risk
buildings - Insurers have reduced the level of premises
inspections as consolidation has progressed.
10Our European Colleagues
11Sprinklers Perform Over a Lifetime
- Manufacturer of Cotton wool with business dating
back to 1821 currently with 20 employees in small
village. - Sprinkler installation installed late 1950s.
- Water supplied via adjacent culvert.
- Regularly inspected and tested.
- Fire 2009.
- Sprinkler operated.
- Minor Damage to building.
- Exposure circa 4M.
- Loss circa 400k.
12Extract from Loss Report
On receipt of the emergency call, XXXXXX Fire
Rescue Service dispatched four tenders manned by
20 fire-fighters, on his arrival, the senior
officer attending found that the fire had been
largely contained due to the operation of
sprinklers within the upper storey of the two
storied building but, nevertheless, water jets
had to be deployed to complete extinguishment in
that area. Thereafter, fire-fighters assisted
in ventilating smoke from the premises whilst
officers manning one tender remained throughout
the night to ensure that all hot spots were dealt
with and that there would be no re-ignition.
13Fire Engineered Buildings
- Insurers can have issues with Fire Engineered
buildings - Identification of Fire Engineered Buildings.
- Continuity of building managers their
understanding of engineering protection systems - Evaluation of Fire Engineered Calculations.
- Fire Engineering being utilised for financial
savings. - What chance does the business owner have?
- Part of the FE strategy would normally assume
fire brigade attendance within an assumed time
frame IRMP? - How often should the fire strategy of a building
be re-evaluated to make the fire risk assessment
competent?
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16Fire Safety Engineering
17Insurer Guidance on Property Protection
18Insurer Guidance on Property Protection
19HOTELS
- Two Prestigious UK Hotels each 30 Floors
- Both have extensive glass curtain walling.
- Both have extensive residential accommodation on
upper floors. - One has sprinkler protection up to 14th Floor.
- One has water mist system to common areas in
part. - One had AFD in fault on 3 occasions visited over
6 week period. - One has a number of apartments extended to floor
above. - Both had no sprinklers in basement.
- Both have severe restrictions to allow adequate
fire fighting. - Both surrounded by areas of severe traffic
congestion. - 1 is city centre one is 10m from river bank.
- BOTH HAD CONSIDERABLE ALTERATIONS TO THE ACTIVE
PASSIVE PROTECTION AS DEFINED IN THE ORIGINAL
DESIGN SPECIFICATION.
20COMPARISON OF TIME OF CALL
36 in quiet hours compared to 19 of all fires
21Audit Commission Rising to the Challenge
- 10 of FRS budget in England could be cut (200M)
- Fails to put issues of funding business
planning together - Is this not what Integrated Risk Management
Planning is? - Remove pumps from operational duty at night when
there are fewer fires. - Calculate pumps/crews required on a simple
formula of calls a station has previously
responded to - This is not risk assessment and does not take
into account current or future demands or
changing circumstances. - Recommends central league tables actively
publicising those FRS delivering all elements of
modernisation - Why not include number of people rescued and
amount of property saved based on economic cost?
22Actions Required Now
- Increase level of advice and enforcement for
commercial buildings - Compulsory KPI to be introduced for Fire Rescue
Services. - Reduce the floor area of warehouses and large
retail premises where sprinklers are required in
line with our European colleagues by reviewing
amending Approved Document B. - Remove the threat of further spending cuts to
Fire Rescue Services. - Immediately commence large scale testing of MMC
used in modern blocks of flats replicating what
has been built over the last 5 years there will
be few new flats built for a few years! - Immediately review the up-skilling of knowledge
and training required for fire-fighters in
metropolitan areas where MMC is being used
commonly in residential flat developments. - Penalise financially those building owners that
do not manage their automatic fire detection
systems and cause unwanted fire signals this
must include public authority properties - Introduce mandatory sprinkler installation for
such risks as large hotels, nursing and
residential homes. - Local information exchange should be considered
between FRS and insurers to assist with fire
crews with knowledge of local risks hazards.