Industry insured losses from Hurricane Michael’s wind and storm-surge will range from $6 billion to $10 billion, according to catastrophe risk modeling firm AIR Worldwide.
“Fueled by unseasonably high 84-degree sea surface temperatures in the Gulf of Mexico and unhindered by any prior landfall, Hurricane Michael rapidly intensified shortly after making landfall at close to Category 5 intensity,” said Dr. Peter Sousounis, vice president and director of meteorology for AIR Worldwide. “It struck near Mexico Beach in the Florida panhandle on the afternoon of Wednesday, October 10, with maximum sustained winds of 155 mph (250 km/h). … Michael is the most powerful hurricane to have come ashore in the Florida panhandle since the first records were kept in 1851.”
Most wind damage was confined to the panhandle and southern Georgia, Sousounis said, although there was some wind-related damage as far north as the Carolinas.
Mexico Beach, Fla., suffered the brunt of the storm, with the majority of structures in that town destroyed. Panama City and the surrounding areas of Lynn Haven and Callaway were also hard-hit.
AIR’s modeled insurance loss estimates include: