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2. Asbestos Liability. Asbestos is not a done dealFilings are continuingUnanticipated changes will affect insurer and reinsurer liabilities. 3. Asbestos Liability. Some History?What's Happening Today?General Observations in the U.S.Around the World. 4. What is Asbestos?. Naturally occurring fibrous mineral with a crystalline structure, containing long chains of silicon and oxygenflexiblestrongdurablefire resistantseparable into filaments.
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1. Casualty Actuarial SocietySeminar on ReinsuranceConcurrent Session: Current EventsChanges in Asbestos Liability June 15-16, 2000
Jennifer L. Biggs, FCAS, MAAA
Tillinghast – Towers Perrin
2. 2 Asbestos Liability Asbestos is not a done deal
Filings are continuing
Unanticipated changes will affect insurer and reinsurer liabilities
3. 3 Asbestos Liability Some History…
What’s Happening Today?
General Observations in the U.S.
Around the World
4. 4 What is Asbestos? Naturally occurring fibrous mineral with a crystalline structure, containing long chains of silicon and oxygen
flexible
strong
durable
fire resistant
separable into filaments
5. 5 Types of asbestos Six types
amphibole types
actinolite
amosite (brown asbestos)
anthophylite
crocidolite (blue asbestos)
tremolite
serpentine fiber
chrysotile (white asbestos)
Chrysotile: 90% of asbestos production; 95% of asbestos in place in U.S. buildings; thought to be less dangerous than amphibole types.
6. 6 Products containing asbestos Used historically in a wide variety of products, including:
yarn, thread, felt, rope packing, flame resistant cloth
steam gaskets and packings, plain and corrugated paper, rollboard, millboard, high temperature insulation, movie props
World War II Ship Building
molded brake linings, brake blocks, filler in plastics, flooring, pottery, insulated wire, pipe covering
brake shoes, clutch facings, cement, plaster, stucco, shingles, siding, tile, sewer pipes, blocks
corrugated roofing, roof sheathing, roofing cement
boiler insulation; insulation of walls, floors, mattresses
paints, varnishes, filter fibers, filter pads
7. 7 Asbestos Usage: Peak of ~1 million tons of asbestos used in the U.S. in 1973
Exposure and use limits not established in the U.S. until the creation of OSHA in 1970
EPA issued ban on most forms of asbestos in 1989
Asbestos is still used today in several products, including:
U.S. Navy submarines
chlorine production
Space shuttle
jointing and gaskets; asphalt coats and sealants
some paper, plastics, cement piping, roofing and shingles
8. 8 Cause of Disease Occupational Exposure
Recognized as a cause of disease since 1920s; universally accepted since 1930s
Long latency: 10-25 years or more
Typical American breathes ~1 million fibers per year via natural and man-made sources
9. 9 Types of Diseases Plueral plaques
Asbestosis
Lung & other cancers
Mesothelioma
10. 10 Initial Litigation First suit filed in Beaumont, TX in 1966
Lawyer won $79,000 in second case in 1969
Landmark case: Borel v. Fibreboard filed 1970; decided 1973
March 1980 TX jury awarded $2.6M to widow of insulation worker
By October 1981 evident that U.S. Courts maximizing insurance coverage for asbestos producers
By 1982, producers began declaring bankruptcy
11. 11 Bankruptcies / Limited Trusts / Other Settlements More than 15 asbestos defendants now bankrupt
National Gypsum filed bankruptcy in 1993
expecting $2.3B in claims
trust funded with only $138M from National Gypsum and $380M from insurers
$4.5B Dow Corning bankruptcy plan approved 12/1999 (SBI)
Babcock & Wilcox filed bankruptcy 2/22/2000
due to demands for higher settlements in asbestos claims
45,000 claims pending
Owens Corning established National Settlement Program (NSP) in 12/1998
resolved 90% of pending claims (176,000); average $4,600 per claim
established fixed payments for future claims without litigation
private agreement between OCF and plaintiffs counsel (~100 firms) requires no court approval
plaintiffs lawyers promise to hold off on filing new claims until 2001 (catch up on backlog)
12. 12 Wellington Agreement Signed 6/19/1985 after 3 years of negotiation by 34 former asbestos producers and 16 insurers
Established Asbestos Claims Facility (ACF)
private, non-profit corporation funded through insurance proceeds
provide efficient, equitable, predictable alternative to the tort system to file and evaluate asbestos-related bodily injury claims
reduce legal expenses
settled insurance coverage disputes
cost-share formula based on each producer’s previous litigation experience
Wellington agreement benefits primary insurers more than reinsurers
13. 13 Center for Claims Resolution (CCR) Withdrawal from ACF triggered by disagreements regarding allocation of claims
emergence of new defendants
Establish CCR 10/1988 with more flexible allocation formula and more aggressive settlement philosophy; votes weighted based on share of liability
CCR members are defendants only (no insurers)
Like the ACF, the CCR provided claims handling services, systems support, allocates costs for settlement and bills insurers
14. 14 Georgine v. Amchem v. Admiral CCR Futures Deal
proposed settlement to Georgine case
$1.3B settlement regarding worldwide exposure of 20 companies
allows opt-outs
Dismissed 6/27/1997
absentee interests (i.e., future claimants) inadequately represented
fails to satisfy requirement of adequacy of representation by named plaintiffs
resulted in flood of new claims against CCR companies
Court calls for legislative solution
Ginsburg: “… a nationwide administrative claims processing regime would provide the most secure, fair, and efficient means of compensating victims of asbestos exposure… Congress, however, has not adopted such a solution.”
15. 15 Fibreboard Ahearn; Ortiz v. Fibreboard
1993: $1.535B settlement of 186,000 pending plus future asbestos personal injury claims against Fibreboard
1993: Trilateral Agreement - $2B back-up plan funded by insurers in case global settlement not approved
CNA: Continental Casualty
Chubb: Pacific Indemnity
Fifth Circuit and Court of Appeals approved class certification on a “limited fund” rationale
Settlement ultimately rejected
excluded some potential plaintiffs
fairness of distribution
conflicting interest of class
court should have given more consideration to Fibreboard’s financial condition
ability to pay
potential insurance funds
Dismissal places new restrictions on limited-fund class actions; expected to result in more bankruptcies
Court again calls to Congress for a solution
16. 16 Proposed Legislation Establish Asbestos Resolution Corp.
pros: unclog court system, expedite process, more victims get compensation quickly, weed out bogus claims (plaintiffs not sick, or illness not caused by asbestos), eliminate state statute of limitations, 25% cap on fees to plaintiff’s lawyers, set up “Office of Asbestos Compensation” for out of court settlements
cons: unreasonable medical criteria deny thousands from making claims, unfairly caps damage amounts, actually takes longer than court system to compensate, can’t collect punitive damages
House and Senate bills: Fairness in Compensation Act
HR1283 approved by House Judiciary Committee by 18-15 vote on 3/16/2000.
S758 (introduced March 1999) currently in Senate Judiciary Committee
Supported by “Coalition for Asbestos Resolution” led by GAF Corp.
GAF spent >$7.1M paying >35 lobbyists since 1997
Opposed by the White House, Association of Trial Lawyers of America, AFL-CIO, Owens Corning
17. 17 Lawyers’ Activities Asbestos specialty firms
Canvassing unions; surge of non-malignant claims
Routinely bundle severe claims with non-malignant claims for settlement
New Claims
Household exposure claims
Second Injury Claims
Medical Monitoring Claims
18. 18 Texas / Mississippi Texas
Prior to 1997 suits from out of state were limited, with the exception of those pertaining to railroads, airlines, and asbestos
Since 1997, annual number of filings in Texas has declined, but not as much as expected
Mississippi
offers procedural advantages:
juries rarely rule against the plaintiff
defendant doesn’t have right to perform medical exams
no provision for class actions, but able to join large groups of individuals with very different claims, and settlements of individual cases don’t require approval by a judge and aren’t made part of the public court process
can add claimants to a suit with no relation to the state, but with similar injuries
19. 19 Rate of Filing (in 000s)
20. 20 Losses from Note 27
21. 21 Losses from Note 27
22. 22 Recognition and Disclosure Rating Agencies
Regulators
SEC
BODs
Investment Analysts
Banks
23. 23 Top Ten Asbestos Reserve Additions — 1998
24. 24 Asbestos reserve development has been somewhat concentrated
25. 25 Asbestos reserves relative to surplusby size group
26. 26 Asbestos reserves relative to total reservesby size group
27. 27 Asbestos drag on combined ratio by size group
28. 28 What’s Happening Today? Continued emergence of peripheral defendants
Roll-forward of initial coverage blocks
Products reclassification
29. 29 Products Reclassification Asbestos claims have traditionally been filed under the products coverage of CGL policies
some property damage: concentrated for a few manufacturers
some premises: Tillinghast’s “Tier 4” defendants
Two courts have ruled that non-products unaggregated GL coverage applies to claims against insulation contractors
Now, traditional products defendants with insulation activities that have exhausted products coverage are attempting to obtain additional insurance coverage by reclassifying claims that were previously paid under products limits as premises/operations.
30. 30 Products Reclassification If reclassification successful
reinstate portion of previously exhausted products limits
make available premises/operations coverage
Limits on premises/operations coverage?
Premises/operations coverage generally doesn’t have aggregate limit
may reflect aggregate limit if subject to Wellington
31. 31 Asbestos Problem/Potential Solutions Asbestos Problem for Insurers
large underlying cost
many exposed policies
judicial climate favoring plaintiffs
Potential Solutions
Reinsurance Placements
T&N
Restructuring
Equitas
CIGNA
32. 32 Quotes from Clients “The claims are continuing”
“Claim filings have remained steady; we expected a decrease by now.”
“Asbestos is the energizer bunny of toxic torts; it keeps going and going and going...”
“We are seeing operations claims from new defendants (contractors, distributors)”
We’ve been approached by producers seeking finite cover. The cover might be a positive influence on financial analyst opinions … The defendants must anticipate that filings will continue … A small number of deals are being done.”
“Asbestos litigation is a profit-driven industry.”
“Don’t think of them as lawyers, think of them as venture capitalists.”
33. 33 Asbestos around the World
34. 34 Asbestos around the World World production has declined significantly since 1973
1973 approximately 5.1 million metric tons
1996 approximately 2.3 million metric tons
In past two decades, consumption has increased dramatically in many developing countries
35. 35 Asbestos in Developing Countries Consumption has increased but safety precautions have not been implemented.
Why the increase?
low cost
high quality
immediate health benefits for the consumer
suited to the economics of poor countries
Why the lack of safety precautions?
Lack of awareness
apathetic governments
Implications:
According to epidemiologist Julian Peto, the surge in use “will result in several million cancer deaths over the next 30 years”
By comparison, over past 30 years USA has had 171,500 premature asbestos-related cancer deaths
36. 36 Asbestos in Europe European Union banned amphibole types of asbestos in 1991. Chrysotile banned 9/27/99; to be fully implemented by 1/1/2005.
Belgium — claims filed under workers compensation system
France — asbestos use prohibited effective 1/1/1997
Italy — asbestos use prohibited in 1992
claims to be paid by The Italian National Security (INAIL), employers (compulsory EL coverage), and insurers
Netherlands — 1997/1998 creation of the Institute for Asbestosis
37. 37 Current Events: Asbestos Liability Changes in Asbestos Liability: Have recent court decisions and procedural changes altered the number and type of claims, as well as the way in which they are presented to insurers and reinsurers?
38. 38 Bibliography A.M. Best Note 27 Data
Alleman, James E. and Mossman, Brooke T., “Asbestos Revisited,” Scientific American, July 1997, p. 70.
“As the Asbestos Crumbles,” Hofstra Law Review, Summer, 1992, 20 Hofstra L. Rev. 1139.
Borel v. Fibreboard, United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, No. 72-1492, September 10, 1973.
Bouska, Amy S. and Cross, Susan L., “A Mass Tort or a Mass of Torts?” Emphasis, 1997/3, p. 10.
Bouska, Amy S. and Miller, Philip D., “The ‘Loser’ – and Still Champion?” Emphasis, 1999/2, p. 2.
Broderick, Kathryn P., Kay, Kenneth R., and Stirn, James R., “A Bad Deal for Reinsurers,” Best’s Review, January 1989, p. 42.
Bryant, Arthur H. and Bueckner, Leslie A., “Commentary,” Mealey’s Litigation Report: Asbestos, 7/16/99, Vol. 14, #12, p. 32.
Cauchon, Dennis, “The Asbestos Epidemic (4 Part Series), USA Today, February 9, 1999.
Cauchon, Dennis, “The Asbestos Epidemic (4 Part Series), USA Today, February 11, 1999.
Centola, Gary D., “Commentary,” Mealey’s Litigation Report: Asbestos, 8/6/99, Vol. 14, #13, p. 39.
Chalasani, Radhika, “The Asbestos Epidemic (4 Part Series), USA Today, February 8, 1999.
Cross, Susan L. and Doucette, John P., “Measurement of Asbestos Bodily Injury Liabilities,” Proceedings of the Casualty Actuarial Society, 1997, Vol. LXXXIV, p. 187.
“Despite State Tort Reform, Asbestos Litigation Thrives,” Texas Journal, October 27, 1999.
Dew, Ted, “Will Lead Poison U.S. Insurers,” Emphasis, 1997/2, p. 10.
39. 39 Bibliography http://congress.nw.dc.us/cqi-bin/thomassearch.pl?dir=congressorg2&term=asbestos
Labaton, Stephen, “How a Company Lets Its Cash Talk,” The New York Times/Money & Business, October 17, 1999.
Mealey’s Litigation Report: Asbestos
7/7/1997, Vol. 12, #1
5/1/1998, Vol. 13, #7, p. 12.
5/7/1999, Vol. 14, #7, p. 23.
8/6/1999, Vol. 14, #13, p. 33.
3/17/2000, Vol.15, #4, p. 6.
5/5/2000, Vol. 15, #7, p. 14.
and various other volumes
Morello, Carol, “The Asbestos Epidemic (4 Part Series), USA Today, February 10, 1999.
Ortiz v. Fibreboard, United States Supreme Court No. 97-1704, Decided June 23, 1999.
Vandehei, Jim, “Asbestos – Claims Bill Battle Heats Up with Attack on GOP Legislative Backers,” The Wall Street Journal, February 22, 2000, p. B32.
Warren, Susan, “Asbestos Suits Target Makers of Wine, Cars, Soups, Soaps,” The Wall Street Journal, April 12, 2000.
Werder, Jr., Richard I., “Commentary,” Mealey’s Litigation Report: Asbestos, 9/3/99, Vol. 14, #15, p. 30.