Thank you very much.
My name is Dr. Blair Feltmate, and I appreciate the opportunity to meet with you. I'm head of the Intact Centre on Climate Adaptation, housed within the Faculty of Environment at the University of Waterloo.
I'm pleased to discuss the challenging topic of protecting Canadian residents from extreme weather events. More specifically, I'll zero in on how Canadians can protect themselves from residential basement flooding, which is the number one cost of climate change in Canada, and I'll then turn to residential wildfire protection.
As you will see, there is much that the federal government can do that is currently not being done to help homeowners help themselves to limit their exposure to the growing financial burden of flooding and wildfire. Before turning to these actions, let me just paint the picture of the formidability of the challenge we're facing in terms of insurance costs impacting Canada's housing market.
I've shared a graph with you that profiles insured losses for Canada from 1983 to the present. What matters most on this figure is the shape of the curve. It's bending upwards sharply, which means that the costs of flooding and wildfires are getting worse faster. This is not where Canada wants to be. To go a bit further, as a result of growing extreme weather, 10% of Canada's housing stock—that's 1.5 million homes—is no longer insurable for flood risk. That's one in 10 homeowners who are unable to insure their biggest financial investment and their retirement plan, their home.
No insurance is a problem for many, given that the average cost of a flooded basement in this country right now is $54,000. In Quebec, in communities where flood risk exceeds 5% in a given year, Desjardins has stopped renewing mortgages. This trend will continue across Canada if we don't get ahead of the curve on adaptation. Over the past 12 years in Canada, for homes and communities impacted by catastrophic flooding, the resale value of homes dropped by 8%, which has changed the loan-to-value ratio on mortgages.
Our group, the Intact centre, will soon release a new report documenting that, for homeowners living in flood-impacted neighbourhoods, we see spikes in the costs of medications to cope with mental stress, psychosocial stress, counselling services and lost time for work. These are your constituents who are suffering.
Turning to some wildfire facts, State Farm and Allstate have stopped writing home fire insurance in California and Arizona. Without fire insurance, you cannot secure a mortgage, which renders a home a stranded asset. In Canada, we need to understand, as Paul referenced, that we are not immune to a California-style situation.
Now that we've covered the bad news, the depressing stuff, let's turn to some good news, starting with the return on investment associated with preparing homes for flooding and wildfire. Notably, one dollar invested in adaptation produces, in avoided losses per decade, about three to eight dollars. What does adaptation look like for Canadian homeowners? This leads us to the infographics I've shared with you, starting with three steps to cost-effective home flood protection.
In the interest of time, I'll leave similar infographics that focus on community flood and wildfire protection for another day. The information presented on the infographic is based on input from the Standards Council of Canada, the Canadian Red Cross, the Insurance Bureau of Canada, and scores of subject matter experts.
Along the top row of the infographic, you see steps that a homeowner can take to protect their home for $0 to lower their flood exposure. Actions can be as simple as checking that a sump pump works by adding water to a sump well and seeing if the pump turns on and pumps water outside. Most people find out that their sump pump doesn't work when they walk into three feet of sewer water in their basement. For a bit more effort, a battery backup supply can be connected to a sump pump to keep it running in the event of an electricity outage, which is very common during major precipitation events.
Turning to wildfire risks, three steps to a cost-effective, fire-smart home, the material I shared with you, show that many simple actions can be taken to limit exposure to wildfire, such as removing shrubs from within a few metres of a house and replacing them with nonburnable materials.
These infographics, the ones I've shared with you, motivate homeowners to act, and this is the key point. Upon receiving infographics, within six months, 70% of homeowners take at least two steps, two actions, to protect their home that they otherwise would not take.
Currently, the infographics on flood and wildfire risk are being shared with customers of major Canadian banks, RBC and BMO, credit unions such as Meridian Credit Union, and property and casualty insurers' customers and clients.
Through these distribution channels, the infographics are currently being shared with about 3.5 million Canadian homeowners twice per year. The federal government could help Canadian homeowners to protect their homes by distributing flood and wildfire infographics on Government of Canada websites like those of Environment and Climate Change Canada, Public Safety Canada and Housing, Infrastructure and Communities.