by Daniel Brouse
July 6, 2025
Insurance: The First Casualty of Climate Collapse in Florida and Beyond
Check out the powerful physics explained below — Wind and water forces scale with the square of velocity (v²)
Yesterday, we discussed the failing insurance markets in Texas. Today, we turn to Florida, where the insurance industry is buckling under the accelerating impacts of climate change. Insurance companies are the canaries in the coal mine of capitalism, the first to feel the collapse of markets as the climate crisis intensifies. Since the 1990s, we have been writing papers warning of this trajectory, hoping to help avert systemic collapse. Sadly, those warnings went unheeded.
Now, Allianz SE board member Gunther Thallinger has sounded the alarm: the rising costs of climate-driven disasters are threatening to break the financial sector’s ability to function—beginning with insurance.
Speaking as both a top executive at Allianz and chair of its investment board, Thallinger warns that the world is rapidly approaching temperature thresholds beyond which many climate risks will simply become uninsurable. And without insurance, the machinery of modern finance—mortgages, real estate, infrastructure, and industry—grinds to a halt.
“Heat and water destroy capital,” Thallinger wrote in a widely discussed LinkedIn post. “Flooded homes lose value. Overheated cities become uninhabitable. Entire asset classes are degrading in real time.”
FLORIDA
Florida is on the front lines of the climate crisis—and its collapsing condo market is the latest casualty. Once seen as an affordable path to homeownership, condos across the state are rapidly becoming unaffordable, unsellable, and on the path to worthlessness.
The reasons are stark:
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Skyrocketing insurance premiums that have doubled or tripled following increasingly destructive hurricanes.
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Special assessments for building upgrades and resilience that can reach $7,200 or more per unit, with little warning.
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HOA fees rising 25% or higher, pushing monthly costs beyond what many owners can bear.
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Limited financing as lenders flee risky flood zones, making it harder for buyers to close on purchases.
What looks like an “affordable” $320,000 condo quickly becomes a financial trap. One owner saw their HOA fee soar to nearly $800 per month while facing a sudden $7,200 assessment, all while insurance doubled. Now, they can’t sell at anywhere near the purchase price—and may be forced to walk away.
Florida is also unique in that its largest insurer is now its own socialized state-run system (Citizens Insurance), a sign of a broken private insurance market unable to price climate risk in a rapidly changing environment.
The Physics Behind the Crisis
The non-linear acceleration of climate change is multiplying the rate of sea level rise, violent rain, storm surge, and the destructive power of wind and water. These forces are not increasing gradually but exponentially, as global heating accelerates the hydrological cycle, intensifies storms, and raises baseline sea levels.
Here’s why this matters physically:
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Wind and water forces scale with the square of velocity (v²).
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A 20 mph wind exerts 4x the force of a 10 mph wind.
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A 40 mph wind exerts 16x the force of a 10 mph wind.
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A 60 mph wind exerts 36x the force of a 10 mph wind.
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Water is 800 times denser than air, so a 10 mph flow of water exerts 800x the force of a 10 mph wind.
As climate change increases storm intensities and rainfall rates, these forces compound damage at an exponential scale. For example:
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Heavier rainfall collapses drainage and sewage systems.
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Storm surges from rising seas undermine foundations.
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Hillsides fail under violent rain.
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Wind intensifies beyond design limits of existing structures.
This is not theoretical. We are witnessing it now:
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Hurricanes that were once “500-year events” are now “5-year events.”
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Rainfall rates that dump a foot of water in an hour are destroying infrastructure.
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Florida’s flood maps are outdated, leaving properties exposed to uninsured and uninsurable risks.
A Systemic Economic Risk
Florida’s condo collapse is a warning for all coastal and river-adjacent economies. As climate change accelerates, insurance and maintenance costs will outpace property value gains, leading to:
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Mass sell-offs and plunging property values.
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Local tax base erosion, making community resilience investments harder.
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Banking and mortgage system stresses as collateral loses value.
The dream of coastal living is colliding with the physics of climate change and the arithmetic of exponential risk. Without a massive rethinking of urban planning, insurance structures, and climate mitigation, Florida’s condo collapse is only the first domino in a cascading series of economic failures driven by climate physics.
This is not about politics—it is about physics, finance, and the survival of communities in a rapidly heating world.
- Climate Collapse Will Break Capitalism
- Insurance Cost and Availability
- The Cost of Climate Change: Rising Homeowners Insurance Rates
- Climate Change and Insurance: The Los Angeles Wildfires
- The Insurance Crisis the FAIR Plan a System Under Strain: California’s insurance industry is facing a growing crisis, rendering it unsustainable and putting the state’s real estate market at significant risk of collapse.
- Climate Change’s Impact on Florida Insurance: For those holding property in Florida, it may indeed be a case of “better late than never” to consider selling or relocating. As climate risks continue to escalate, so too will the financial and personal costs of remaining in high-risk areas.
- Homeowners Insurance Coverage $1 Trillion Hole
- Flood Insurance
- How is All Real Estate at Risk From Climate Change?
- The Age of Loss and Damage
* This climate model employs chaos theory