Please select your home edition
Edition
Allen Dynamic 40 Leaderboard

Insurance Industry agrees to standardise definition of 'flood'

by Jeni Bone on 8 Feb 2011
Defining the word ’flood’ is the first step to claims and recovery. SW
Australia's insurance industry has agreed to establish a standard definition for flood insurance, according to the federal Assistant Treasurer Bill Shorten, commenting on the torrent of insurance claims that have followed the recent crises in Queensland, NSW and Victoria.

About half of all homeowners affected by the summer floods in eastern Australia don't have insurance to cover the disaster.

Following a meeting with the Insurance Council of Australia in Sydney today, Mr Shorten said the industry had agreed to apply a standard definition to flood insurance and write policies in simpler language.

'I think everyone who owns a home and contents and insurance policy knows that a lot of the fine print is very hard to decipher,' he said at a press conference last week.

'When tragedy strikes, as it has with the floods, many people are left scrambling to wonder if they are adequately insured for the flood or event that has just occurred. It is not acceptable in the future not to have standard definitions ... so people know what they've bought and what they haven't bought.'

In the aftermath of the floods, many homeowners discovered their insurance policy covered them in the event of a flash flood or flooding resulting from a storm, but not flooding from a river.

Mr Shorten said he would meet the council twice over the next month, and consumer groups would be consulted on how best to apply a standard definition.

The move would 'not be without its complexities', he said. 'Giving a standard definition is not going to be the panacea, the silver bullet for sorting out all costs arising out of floods. But the insurance industry accepts that having better contracts and clarity on what's covered and what isn't is an important building block to ensuring Australian communities are resilient and safe.'

Insurance companies were handling about 40,000 claims worth $1.5 billion in Queensland and nearly 4500 claims in Victoria, Mr Shorten said.

He said anyone who believed their claim was not being fairly dealt with should appeal to the Financial Ombudsman Service.

Mr Shorten pointed out that 'many millions of dollars of claims' had already been paid out. 'In terms of admissions about what's gone wrong in terms of insurance, I'm more interested at this point in sorting out the problem for the future than allocating blame for the past.'

More at fos.org.au
Rolly Tasker Sails 2023 FOOTERPantaenius Sail 2025 AUS FooterExcess Catamarans

Related Articles

2025 Bermuda Gold Cup Day 4
Rain delays but rivalries intensify It's still all to play for at the Aspen Women's Match Racing Regatta after rain prevented the round-robin stage from being completed.
Posted today at 4:29 am
Coastal Classic: Lucky first to finish at 0323hrs
Bryon Ehrhart's pocket maxi, Lucky (USA), finished the 120nm PIC Coastal Classic at 0323am Bryon Ehrhart's pocket maxi, Lucky (USA), finished the 120nm PIC Coastal Classic at 0323am after racing for over 17 hours. Three hours later, Ian Moore, skippered Callisto, a Pac52 design, crossed the finish line.
Posted today at 1:30 am
2025 Wingfoil Racing Youth & Masters Worlds day 3
Families, Cows, and Calm Before the Storm! Light winds kept the fleet ashore at the WingFoil Racing Youth and Masters World Championships which means racing will resume on Saturday with the leading riders separated by just a few points.
Posted on 24 Oct
iQFOiL Youth & Junior Europeans 2025 day 6
A dramatic close to the fleet racing in Sardinia The final day of the Opening Series at the iQFOiL Youth & Junior European Championships brought a dramatic close to the fleet racing in Sardinia, with the Mistral delivering strong winds from the early morning.
Posted on 24 Oct
Rolex Middle Sea Race Day 7
The race that caters to all Each year the Rolex Middle Sea Race attracts a diverse fleet in terms of yacht design, size and age, crew composition and, of course, ambition. It is from this diversity that so many extraordinary stories emerge.
Posted on 24 Oct
Transat Café L'or: Saturday start for Ocean Fifty
The Ocean Fifty class and all its skippers have requested to advance their start The Ocean Fifty class and all its skippers have requested to advance their start to the Transat Café L'Or race which was originally scheduled for Sunday, October 26th.
Posted on 24 Oct
High stakes and High Seas
18 IMOCA boats battle at the start of the Transat Café l'OR The final IMOCA race of the 2025 season gets under way from Le Havre for Martinique in the Caribbean on Sunday, and it looks set to be a thriller featuring some of the top boats and sailors in the Class ready to push hard for victory.
Posted on 24 Oct
2025 Bermuda Gold Cup Day 3
Egnot-Johnson surges, Östling shines Defending champion Johnie Berntsson, from Sweden, is the first skipper to book his spot in the semi-finals of the 2025 Bermuda Gold Cup, finishing unbeaten for the second day running.
Posted on 24 Oct
Elite fleet for Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race
A massive fleet of 142 yachts have entered the iconic Australian race Entries have closed for the 80th running of the 'Great Race South', the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race, with an elite fleet set to face the starter's cannon on Boxing Day.
Posted on 24 Oct
Watching the growing sailing scene in China
A fun weekend at the 2025 Lake Fuxian Regatta I've become fascinated with the growing sailing scene in China. I had so many preconceptions ahead of my first visit to the country in 2024, which were blown out of the water on that trip, and this was reaffirmed at the Lake Fuxian Regatta.
Posted on 24 Oct