{"id":28905,"date":"2017-08-02T09:00:32","date_gmt":"2017-08-02T13:00:32","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/biznews.fiu.edu\/?p=28905"},"modified":"2017-08-09T15:10:16","modified_gmt":"2017-08-09T19:10:16","slug":"shahid-hamid-and-his-windstorm-model-recertified-by-state","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/biznews.fiu.edu\/2017\/08\/shahid-hamid-and-his-windstorm-model-recertified-by-state\/","title":{"rendered":"Shahid Hamid and his windstorm model recertified by state."},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/p>\n
Understanding the financial and insurance impact of the destructive power of hurricane on buildings and their insurers is the rare specialty of Professor Shahid S. Hamid. He not only chairs the Department of Finance in FIU\u2019s College of Business, but is also director of the Laboratory for Insurance, Financial and Economic Research, located in the International Hurricane Research Center (IHRC) at FIU.<\/p>\n
Over the last decade, the State of Florida has looked to the work of Hamid and his team as the benchmark when it comes to evaluating financial risks faced by insurance companies that write windstorm policies, and, in turn, set the premiums paid by their customers.<\/p>\n
In May, Florida again demonstrated its faith in the work of Hamid and his team, recertifying their model for the next two years.<\/p>\n
\u201cIt\u2019s not an easy thing to get certified,\u201d said Hamid, noting that only four or five other models have managed to obtain the state\u2019s blessing.<\/p>\n
Along with the recertification, which lasts two years, there was good news in state\u2019s 2017-2018 budget: a grant of $960,000, which pays Hamid\u2019s team not only to update and run the existing hurricane wind model, but for continuing work on a separate $5.6 million flood risk and loss model, as governments hope to supplement the National Flood Insurance program with private ones.<\/p>\n
\u201cWe will have a prototype for the flood model ready by the end of the year,\u201d Hamid said.<\/p>\n
The grant and recertification, which came only after an exhaustive review and a trip to Tallahassee for a presentation before the Florida Commission on Hurricane Loss Projection Methodology, is the latest chapter in work that has been ongoing since 2001. That was when Dr. Hamid and his team won a competitive bid to take on a new project: figuring out projected hurricane losses.<\/p>\n