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Cost of Fire Increasing at ‘Alarming’ Rate

The cost of fire is increasing at an ‘alarming’ rate according to Allister Smith of insurers Aviva.

Speaking at a day of seminars organised by the ASFP, the UK

Property Risk Manager of the insurer expressed his deep concern at how the focus on designing buildings that are exclusively focused on ensuring life safety — and not also in protecting the fabric and contents of the building — is costing the UK huge amounts of money.

Fire minister Brandon Lewis also spoke at the event and praised the fire sector and fire and rescue services for their excellent work in reducing deaths from accidental fire — down 36 per cent in ten years to 168. But while deaths from fire have been falling, the cost of fire has been going up, said Smith.

Let there be no doubt that we as an insurance industry are increasingly concerned at the increase in fire losses. They are running at the highest figures since records began.

The total cost of fires is increasing at an alarming amount. The total cost of fire costs my insurance GB pound 1-1.3bn a year. On top of that business interruption costs are high. The cost is increasing beyond inflation.

He went on to explain that insurers are looking to reduce the extent of fire and minimise its effect on the contents of a building, as well as looking to improve the safety of fire crews entering in the event of a fire.

What I’m hearing more and more from Fire and Rescue Services that is alarming — after dealing with a fire, we’re not dealing with a fire in a building, but a building that is on fire. We’re seeing more open plan buildings that allow more rapid spread of fire and an increase in out of town developments where fires can spread for longer without detection.

Smith then showed the audience an image from an unnamed fire safety engineering website that refers to the savings made using a fire safety engineering design process. By omitting the use of sprinklers, reducing levels of compartmentation, removal of fire-rated glass, and a reduction in fire-rated facades, the designers claimed they could save money while still keeping the quality of fire protection.

“Designing for life safety is only part of the solution,” he went on to say, while also emphasising that fire engineering in and of itself was not the problem, but if insurers were involved in the fire design at the “earliest possible opportunity” then they would be able to help reduce their exposure to risk, and therefore also the cost of premiums.

Is fire engineering leaving the contents of buildings at greater risk?

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