“…A majority of studies have found no detectable trend in normalized losses (Bouwer, 2011). Studies on insured losses that in general meet higher data quality standards than data on overall losses due to thoroughly monitored payouts have focused on developed countries including Australia, Germany, Spain, the USA (Changnon, 2007(Changnon, , 2008(Changnon, , 2009aBarredo et al, 2012;Barthel and Neumayer, 2012;Sander et al, 2013; see also Section 10.7.3). Studies of normalized losses from extreme winds associated with hurricanes in the USA (Miller et al, 2008;Pielke Jr. et al, 2008;Schmidt et al, 2010;Bouwer and Botzen, 2011) and the Caribbean (Pielke Jr. et al, 2003), tornadoes in the USA (Brooks and Doswell, 2002;Boruff et al, 2003;Simmons et al, 2013), and wind storms in Europe (Barredo, 2010) have failed to detect trends consistent with anthropogenic climate change, although some studies were able to find signals in loss records related to climate variability, such as damage and loss of life due to wildfires in Australia related to ENSO and Indian Ocean dipole phenomena (Crompton et al, 2010), or typhoon loss variability in the western North Pacific (Welker and Faust, 2013).…”