Red Cross leads pilot of parametric flood insurance in Malawi
The Malawi Red Cross Society and the Danish Red Cross, in partnership with African Risk Capacity (ARC) Ltd., JBA Global Resilience, the InsuResilience Solutions Fund (ISF), and the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, have piloted Malawi’s first parametric flood insurance. The project is built on advanced flood-risk modelling with predefined contingency plans, as local disaster…
The Malawi Red Cross Society and the Danish Red Cross, in partnership with African Risk Capacity (ARC) Ltd., JBA Global Resilience, the InsuResilience Solutions Fund (ISF), and the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, have piloted Malawi’s first parametric flood insurance.
The project is built on advanced flood-risk modelling with predefined contingency plans, as local disaster committees have also been trained to use forecasts, hazard maps, and cash-preparedness tools to turn funds into action quickly.
This parametric solution is designed to provide rapid access to funds in the event of a severe flood.
The south-eastern African country regularly faces devastating floods that damage homes, crops, and infrastructure. With high poverty levels and overstretched humanitarian resources, response funding often arrives late and in insufficient amounts. This pilot in Phalombe District aims to change that by shifting disaster response from reactive to predictive.
The Malawi Flood Insurance project is a concrete example of how innovative finance can complement traditional grants. This pilot aims to make humanitarian funding faster, more predictable, and sustainable, while easing pressure on humanitarian budgets and allowing scarce grant funding to be directed to crises that cannot be forecast or modelled.
If successful, the model could be scaled to cover more districts in Malawi and adapted for other countries facing climate-related hazards, helping close the disaster protection gap and offering a scalable model for resilience.
Chifundo Kalulu, Secretary General, Malawi Red Cross Society, Co-Designer and Implementing Partner, commented, “The new flood insurance is a big step forward for resilience in Malawi. Funds can be transferred within days – not months – and families can receive support when they need it most.”
Anders Ladekarl, Secretary General, Danish Red Cross, policyholder and technical enabler of the project, added, “Humanitarian needs are rising, and traditional grants alone are not enough. The Malawi Flood Insurance shows how pre-arranged, trigger-based finance can complement donor funding to strengthen resilience and deliver aid when it’s needed most.”
Paul Maisey, Director, JBA Global Resilience, Developer of the flood-risk model and trigger, said, “JBA has greatly valued the collaboration with our partners on the implementation of disaster risk financing in Malawi. Through this co-development, we have been able to apply JBA’s market-leading flood-risk analytics to the needs of local stakeholders. This type of pre-arranged, risk-informed financing offers the possibility of bridging the insurance protection gap.”
David Maslo, Chief Executive Officer, ARC Ltd., the insurance partner of the project, added, “This initiative is a powerful example of how we can tailor ARC Ltd.’s parametric solutions to different needs across the continent. By insuring the Danish Red Cross for severe floods, we are helping strengthen the speed and predictability of humanitarian action in Malawi. Most importantly, this pilot shows how partnership enables us to combine our strengths and expand resilience where it is needed most.”
Irene Loder, M&E Expert, InsuResilience Solutions Fund, concluded, “At the InsuResilience Solutions Fund, our goal is to enable sustainable, scalable insurance solutions that close the protection gap for vulnerable populations. The Malawi Flood Insurance project is a tangible example of how innovative financing can complement humanitarian aid and strengthen climate resilience.”

