According to the survey of more than 300 risk managers in 21 European countries, the majority of respondents expect risk management to play a bigger role post-Covid-19. Three quarters of risk managers believe demand for risk management will grow as a result of the pandemic.
The pandemic should elevate the
role of risk management but has highlighted failings in risk financing and
insurance cover, according to a new survey by Ferma.
Risk management is likely to be
more appreciated and better understood as a result of the crisis, according to
Athina Pehrman, group risk manager at Electrolux Professional Group and
president of Swedish risk management association Swerma. Speaking at the survey
launch webinar this week, Ms Pehrman said she hopes risk managers will be
“elevated” and given more access to the board.
“I hope that [the pandemic] will breathe new
life into risk departments, such as bringing in scenario planning in areas like
climate change or the increasingly volatile political environment. There is no
excuse not to be ready. And when it happens we can act with speed,” said Ms
Pehrman, who has been given more access to her board during the pandemic.
Also speaking on the webinar,
Melanie Steiner, board member of US Ecology and former CRO at a US-based
fashion company, said organisations will now focus more on building resilience
and quick decision making. Companies will look to “rewire” their operating models
and supply chains to build resilience and agility, she said.
According to the Ferma survey,
almost half (46%) of organisations plan to make changes to their supply chains
as a result of the pandemic. Some 70% of these organisations expect to source
additional suppliers, 59% to revise contract terms, 51% to improve supply chain
transparency and 34% to boost risk control, including purchasing insurance.
Both Ms Steiner and Ms Pehrman
believe that risk management will take a more strategic role going forward. “We
do not see risk embedded in the strategic process enough. The companies that
are getting it right are those that link risk and strategy together,” said Ms
Steiner. This will become even more important with digitalisation, which is
generating some of the biggest risks and opportunities for many companies, she
said.
Ms Pehrman hopes that risk
managers will be given more access to senior management and become part of the
strategic process. “I hope that the risk manager’s role will change from being
reactive to proactive. Hopefully we will be included in the early stages, for
us to be more proactive and supportive at the table. As risk managers, we need
to step up and show our value. Risk management should not be seen as
burdensome, but as adding value,” she said.
“It is time that risk leaders look for
additional resources to insure that ERM, crisis management business continuity
management and insurance are properly resources and have meaning, and are not
just boilerplate or rubber stamping,” she added.
While risk managers made an
important contribution during the pandemic, insurance has not fared well,
according to the Ferma survey. Two thirds (67%) of respondents said insurance,
especially for non-damage business interruption (NDBI), had not fulfilled corporate
needs.
Some 72% of risk managers said
they did not have a risk transfer mechanisms in place for pandemics, while just
5% said insurance has provided business interruption cover for Covid-19-related
losses. This suggests there is a “coverage gap at work”, according to Ferma
chief executive, Typhaine Beaupérin.
About 60% of risk managers said
they would be interested in purchasing NDBI insurance for pandemic or other
catastrophic events. However, the breakdown of responses was more cautious.
Only 14% said they would be interested in buying NDBI insurance to a ‘very
great extent’ and 46% to ‘an extent’, while 23% said they were interested, but
‘not much’.
Ferma president Dirk Wegener
said: “Insurance, unfortunately, has not provided the support organisations
need for their business interruption. There is a strong appetite for a future
financial solution. We have a long relationship with the insurance industry. We
want it to be part of a solution by contributing not just risk transfer but
also risk expertise to a combined public-private initiative.”
Ms Pehrman said that state and
industry-backed pandemic pools might be a possible way forward. However,
coverage triggers for NDBI are problematic, while there is a question over what
exactly is insured.
Captives are likely to play a
bigger role in risk management plans going forward, bridging gaps in insurance
cover and managing the hardening insurance market, according to Ms Pehrman. But
when it comes to covering pandemic risk, Ms Pehrman was more circumspect. Few
captives would have the capital to absorb business interruption losses for a
long shutdown, she said.
The survey revealed that many,
but not all, risk managers played an important role in managing the coronavirus
crisis in their organisation. Just under a third (30%) of respondents were
involved in creating and implementing their organisation’s Covid-19 crisis
management, with only 17% leading the process. More than 20% have been involved
in their organisation’s pandemic communications response, while 23% are playing
a significant role in recovery plans.
Just under a third (31%) of
organisations included pandemics on their risk register in September last year.
However, the vast majority of respondents (90%) felt their organisations were
either well or somewhat prepared to deal with the pandemic. Principle risk
management tools were business continuity plans (74%) and unspecified
preventive measures (59%).
While almost three quarters of
organisations had business continuity plans (BCP) in place, these were of
limited use when the pandemic hit, according to Ms Pehrman and Ms Steiner.
While regularly updated and tested BCPs are useful in a crisis, they had not
provided a “roadmap” for the Covid-19 crisis due to its “magnitude” and speed,
they said. “Having a BCP is useful, but in itself was wholly insufficient,”
said Ms Steiner.
Commenting on the survey, Mr
Wegener said the results provide an important insight into the role of risk
managers during the pandemic and lessons that will be incorporated into
enterprise risk management for the future.
On the back of the survey
findings, Ferma called on the European Commission to encourage corporate risk
and insurance managers to play a key role in promoting risk awareness and
support the development of a business continuity management culture. It also
reiterated earlier calls for the EU to create a public-private financial
solution for NDBI cover for pandemics and other major catastrophic risks.
“Ferma has provided an important and timely
contribution to the discussions at European level. We look forward to our
continued interaction with policymakers on this important issue,” said Mr
Wegener.
CRE
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