In this episode of La Loupe, Xavier Yvon explains how French insurers are going to have to manage more and more claims due to natural disasters, when the system is not ready, with Céline Delbecque from the Société de L’Express service, and Sandra Marsaud, Renaissance MP.
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The team: Xavier Yvon (presentation), Charlotte Baris (writing), Mathias Penguilly (editing), Jules Krot (directing) and Marion Galard (work-study).
Music and dressing: Emmanuel Herschon/Studio Torrent
Picture credits: Philippe Desmazes/AFP
Logo: Anne-Laure Chapelain/Benjamin Chazal
How to listen to a podcast? Follow the leader.
Xavier Yvon: As summer vacation is approaching and you haven’t even left yet, I would like to tell you about your return.
When you come home after one, two or even three weeks away from home, despite the rest you’ve just taken, there’s always a little stress when you turn the key: has the neighbor come to feed cat ? Was there a water leak? Have the plants not suffered too much from the heat? Worse, didn’t we get robbed?
Now you can add a new concern to this list: am I going to discover a huge crack in a wall?
Because with the increase in the number of droughts, the houses exposed to this risk – very suddenly – are more and more numerous, to the point of potentially affecting half of the houses in France. However, our insurers do not seem ready to deal with this phenomenon, let alone the multiplication of natural disasters.
In this episode of La Loupe, we tell you how these cracked houses are the symbol of a system that could be overwhelmed by global warming.
For further
PODCAST. Climate: the advantages (and challenges) of European legislation
“Our neighbors have been denounced”: in times of drought, haro on private swimming pools
“We didn’t have the right clauses”: for the victims of fires, the hardest part begins
The drought in France