Close Menu

    Stay Connected

    Intelligence That Moves Markets
    Your guide through the insurance innovation landscape.
    Get the Weekly Intelligence Briefing

    What's Hot

    InsurTech Shifts from Disruption to Infrastructure as AI Captures Two-Thirds of Industry Funding

    March 16, 2026

    Plymouth Rock CEO: Legacy Carriers Are the Real InsurTechs

    March 16, 2026

    InsurTech Funding Hits $5.08B in 2025 as Re/Insurers Set Investment Record and AI Captures Two-Thirds of Capital

    March 16, 2026
    X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    InsureTechTrends
    Subscribe
    • Home
    • Today’s Intelligence
      • Breaking News
      • The “So What?
      • Exclusives
    • Insights & Strategy
      • AI & Emerging Tech
      • Corporate Strategy
      • Market Trends
    • Funding & Markets
      • Venture & Growth Capital
      • M&A Tracker
      • Regulation & Policy
    • Solution Reviews
      • 10-Point Ratings
      • Product Categories
    • Get in touch
      • About Us
      • Contribute
      • Partner & Sponsor
      • Get In Touch
    InsureTechTrends
    Home»Today's Intelligence»Exclusives»Flood Models Are Getting an AI Upgrade — and Insurers Can’t Afford to Wait
    Exclusives

    Flood Models Are Getting an AI Upgrade — and Insurers Can’t Afford to Wait

    From Physics to Prediction: How AI Is Redrawing the Flood Risk Map for Global Insurers
    Corey WickBy Corey WickMarch 16, 2026Updated:March 16, 2026034 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram WhatsApp
    Follow Us
    Google News Flipboard
    AI Flood Insurance
    AI-Powered Flood Modelling: The Intelligence Shift
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email Copy Link

    Flood risk models built on historical data are failing. With insured natural catastrophe losses exceeding $137 billion in 2024—the fifth consecutive year above $100 billion—and floods accounting for roughly $13 billion of that total in Europe alone, the industry’s reliance on backward-looking models is becoming an expensive liability.

    Enter AI-enhanced catastrophe modelling. In a panel discussion hosted by InsTech in October, Professor Paul Bates—Chairman and Co-Founder of Fathom, the Bristol-based flood intelligence firm acquired by Swiss Re in December 2023—outlined both the promise and the boundaries of applying machine learning to one of insurance’s most complex perils.

    The Core Shift: Better Data Before Better Algorithms

    The conversation challenged a common assumption: that AI alone will solve flood modelling’s accuracy problem. Bates argued that the foundation of better flood prediction starts with better terrain data—specifically digital elevation models (DEMs)—not just more sophisticated algorithms.

    Fathom’s approach combines peer-reviewed physics-based modelling with machine learning in targeted applications. The company’s FathomDEM+ product uses a novel ML approach to produce high-resolution global terrain data, which then feeds into physics-based flood simulations. AI improves the inputs; physics governs the outputs.

    This distinction matters. In a market flooded with vendors claiming “AI-powered” capabilities, Fathom’s methodology—published in Environmental Research Letters and other peer-reviewed journals—offers a transparency standard that most competitors lack.

    Swiss Re’s Integration: From Acquisition to Operational Impact

    The strategic significance extends beyond research. In early 2026, Swiss Re announced it is integrating Fathom’s flood hazard and terrain data directly into its internal catastrophe model. The integration includes building 50,000-year probabilistic flood event sets that leverage AI-enhanced climate models to capture extreme scenarios and remove historical biases.

    This is not a pilot program. Fathom’s high-fidelity flood models are already active within Swiss Re’s Risk Data Solutions product suite, and ongoing development is systematically embedding Fathom data across Swiss Re’s underwriting and portfolio management operations.

    A McKinsey Global Institute report from December 2025 estimated that nearly half the world’s landmass—home to approximately four billion people—is exposed to flood-related hazards. For Swiss Re, owning the data pipeline from raw terrain intelligence through to probabilistic modelling creates a significant competitive moat in pricing this risk.

    Why It Matters: The Validation Gap

    The InsTech panel highlighted a critical industry tension: the rush to adopt AI-driven tools without sufficient validation infrastructure. Bates emphasized that open science and peer-reviewed methods should be non-negotiable criteria when evaluating catastrophe models—a position that cuts against the opacity of many proprietary modelling vendors.

    This resonates with broader industry dynamics. The European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) made its AI Forecasting System operational for deterministic forecasts in February 2025 and extended it to ensemble forecasts by July. DeepMind’s GenCast system, published in Nature, demonstrated the ability to produce global 15-day ensemble weather forecasts in roughly eight minutes. The tools are maturing fast. The validation frameworks are not keeping pace.

    For insurers evaluating catastrophe model vendors, this creates a clear decision criterion: demand published methodology, transparent validation, and peer-reviewed science. Models that can’t show their work should raise red flags—regardless of how sophisticated their marketing materials appear.

    The Competitive Landscape Is Shifting

    Swiss Re’s Fathom integration is part of a broader pattern. Munich Re’s Risk Management Partners unit partnered with ICEYE in late 2025 to integrate satellite-based flood intelligence into its Location Risk Intelligence platform. First Street Foundation has partnered with the Connecticut Insurance Department to provide property-level climate risk data to homeowners—a first-of-its-kind public-private initiative. Aon expanded its Climate Risk Monitor with enhanced Fathom-powered flood capabilities.

    The convergence is clear: reinsurers are vertically integrating flood intelligence, and the winners will be those who control the data pipeline from raw observation through to portfolio-level risk assessment.

    What Comes Next

    Three developments to watch. First, regulatory attention to AI model transparency is accelerating—expect flood model validation standards to tighten, particularly in the EU and UK markets. Second, the gap between reinsurers with proprietary flood intelligence and those relying on third-party models will widen, creating pricing advantages for the vertically integrated players. Third, the NFIP’s temporary shutdown in late 2025 exposed structural vulnerabilities in public flood insurance, accelerating demand for private alternatives powered by precisely the kind of granular AI modelling Fathom delivers.

    The insurance industry has spent decades building flood models on what happened. The shift to AI-enhanced modelling is about pricing what will happen—and the carriers that make this transition first will define the market’s next decade.

    Source: InsTech, “How AI is changing flood modelling”(November 2025)

    AI flood modelling catastrophe models climate risk InsureTech InsurTech Swiss Re Fathom
    Follow on Google News Follow on Flipboard
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Copy Link
    Corey Wick
    • LinkedIn

    Related Posts

    Plymouth Rock CEO: Legacy Carriers Are the Real InsurTechs

    March 16, 2026

    Clearcover’s Dearborn Labs Bets on Embedded AI Teams Over SaaS — A New Carrier Modernization Model Emerges

    March 16, 2026

    Navy SEALs of InsureTech?

    October 6, 2024
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Top Posts

    Peak3 (Formerly ZA Tech) Announces Rebrand and Funding

    October 6, 202422 Views

    10 Innovative InsureTechs Companies & Visionary Founders

    October 6, 202422 Views

    Spotlight: Bill Song – From Engineer to Insurtech Innovator

    September 30, 202418 Views

    Hippo to Go Public in Merger with Reinvent Technology – $5B deal

    March 4, 202117 Views

    Spotlight – Who’s the Birdey Behind Birdeye?

    September 30, 202416 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    CONTENT
    • Today’s Intelligence
    • Insights & Strategy
    • Funding & Markets
    RESOURCES
    • Webinars & Events
    • Reports & Whitepapers
    • Solution Reviews
    • Case Studies
    COMPANY
    • About Us
    • Our Team
    • Contribute
    • Partner
    • Contact
    STAY CONNECTED

    Intelligence That Moves Markets
    Your guide through the insurance innovation landscape.
    Get the Weekly Intelligence Briefing

    Facebook X (Twitter) Vimeo YouTube LinkedIn
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Services
    • Cookie Settings
    • Advertising Disclosure
    • Sitemap
    © 2025 InsureTechTrends.com • All Rights Reserved

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    STAY CONNECTED

    Intelligence That Moves Markets
    Your guide through the insurance innovation landscape.
    Get the Weekly Intelligence Briefing