Alberta Floods Pegged Canada’s Costliest Natural Disaster
The bureau, which represents Canadian home, cars and business insurers, said the preliminary estimate for the floods surpassed the C$1.57 billion in damage caused by the 1998 ice storms in Ontario and Quebec.
“It’s a staggering number that we expect will go even higher, Bill Adams, the bureau’s vice-president, western and pacific, said in a statement.
Heavy rains over the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains that began in late June caused the 100-year flood that was blamed for four deaths, forcing the evacuation of thousands and shutting Calgary’s downtown core, the center of the country’s oil and gas industry, for nearly a week.
The preliminary estimate, which will be updated in 60 days, is calculated from more than 25,000 claims filed to insurers since the floods.
($1 = $1.03 Canadian dollars)
(Reporting by Scott Haggett; editing by Andrew Hay)
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