
The alliance bridges underwriting and capital markets to close a massive protection gap, strengthening resilience and reinsurance capacity across high‑risk fire corridors.
The alliance between Delos Insurance Solutions and ROAR Partners marks a rare convergence of underwriting expertise and investment advisory in the United States’ wildfire belt. California’s recent designation as an “insurance desert” – highlighted by the 2025 Los Angeles conflagration that generated $150‑275 billion in losses – exposed a $110 billion protection gap, leaving one in five high‑risk homes uninsured. By targeting lower‑development‑risk zones and forging multi‑stakeholder coalitions, the partnership seeks to plug that gap, restore property values, and stabilize tax revenues across fire‑prone counties. The collaboration also plans to leverage state incentives to subsidize retrofits.
Central to the collaboration is ROAR’s Future Proofing America framework, which promotes an “in‑lieu‑of‑loss” investment thesis. The model channels capital into pre‑disaster resilience measures such as fire‑resistant construction, vegetation management, and advanced mitigation financing, including catastrophe bonds and public‑private risk pools. Leveraging AI‑driven hazard modeling, the duo moves away from reliance on historical loss tables, enabling more granular risk identification and pricing. This data‑rich approach is designed to attract reinsurance capacity, lower premiums, and create sustainable underwriting pathways for private insurers. Early pilot projects in Sonoma and Ventura counties are already demonstrating premium reductions of up to 15%.
Beyond California, the strategy offers a template for other Pacific‑Coast, Mountain, and Southwest states that grapple with cascading hazards—drought, wind, flash floods, and seasonal fires. By reclassifying homes currently trapped in legacy programs like the FAIR Plan, the initiative could revive local tax bases, preserve jobs, and accelerate post‑disaster recovery. If successful, the model may inspire federal and state policymakers to endorse similar financing mechanisms, fostering a more resilient national housing stock and reducing systemic exposure for the broader property‑insurance market. Long‑term, the approach could serve as a catalyst for national climate‑risk legislation.
Comments
Want to join the conversation?
Loading comments...