• About Us
  • Contacts
  • 0,00 $
Thursday, March 26, 2026
  • Login
THE MOZAMBIQUE TIMES
  • Home
  • Politics
    Chapo Reaffirms Commitment to APRM

    Chapo Reaffirms Commitment to APRM

    Chapo: One Year Trying to Get the Country Back on Track

    Chapo: One Year Trying to Get the Country Back on Track

    Líderes da Sociedade Civil Preocupados com o Risco de Interferência do Governo na Gestão das ONGs

    Civil Society Leaders Concerned About Government Interference in NGO Operations

    Polícia Nega ter Disparado Contra Caravana de Venâncio Mondlane

    Police Deny Shooting at Mondlane’s motorcade

    Terrorism in Cabo Delgado: EU Disburses 20 Million Euros for Defence Forces of Rwanda

    Rwanda’s Involvement in the Congo War Does Not Affect European Union Funding in Cabo Delgado

    Parto Difícil: Daniel Chapo com Dificuldades de Formar Governo

    Chapo Wants Natural Resources to Serve the Country’s Development

    Portagens Incendiadas em Nova Vaga de Protestos em Maputo

    Toll Gates Set on Fire in New Wave of Protests

    Thursday Bloody Thursday

    Private Residence of Mayor of Manhiça Set on Fire

    Venâncio Mondlane Reafirma Disponibilidade para Diálogo com Chapo

    Venâncio Mondlane Reaffirms Willingness for Dialogue with Chapo

    Trending Tags

    • MOZAMBIQUE ELECTIONS
    • POLICE
    • Elections
  • Security
    • Terrorism
    • Crime and Corruption
  • Economy
  • Oil and Gas
  • Gender
  • Climate
  • Investigation
  • Opinion
  • Fact Check
  • MOZCAST
  • Advertise here
pt PT en ENG
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Politics
    Chapo Reaffirms Commitment to APRM

    Chapo Reaffirms Commitment to APRM

    Chapo: One Year Trying to Get the Country Back on Track

    Chapo: One Year Trying to Get the Country Back on Track

    Líderes da Sociedade Civil Preocupados com o Risco de Interferência do Governo na Gestão das ONGs

    Civil Society Leaders Concerned About Government Interference in NGO Operations

    Polícia Nega ter Disparado Contra Caravana de Venâncio Mondlane

    Police Deny Shooting at Mondlane’s motorcade

    Terrorism in Cabo Delgado: EU Disburses 20 Million Euros for Defence Forces of Rwanda

    Rwanda’s Involvement in the Congo War Does Not Affect European Union Funding in Cabo Delgado

    Parto Difícil: Daniel Chapo com Dificuldades de Formar Governo

    Chapo Wants Natural Resources to Serve the Country’s Development

    Portagens Incendiadas em Nova Vaga de Protestos em Maputo

    Toll Gates Set on Fire in New Wave of Protests

    Thursday Bloody Thursday

    Private Residence of Mayor of Manhiça Set on Fire

    Venâncio Mondlane Reafirma Disponibilidade para Diálogo com Chapo

    Venâncio Mondlane Reaffirms Willingness for Dialogue with Chapo

    Trending Tags

    • MOZAMBIQUE ELECTIONS
    • POLICE
    • Elections
  • Security
    • Terrorism
    • Crime and Corruption
  • Economy
  • Oil and Gas
  • Gender
  • Climate
  • Investigation
  • Opinion
  • Fact Check
  • MOZCAST
  • Advertise here
No Result
View All Result
THE MOZAMBIQUE TIMES
No Result
View All Result
Home Climate

Mozambique Receives Millions in Compensation for Damage Caused by Extreme Climatic Events

Aurélio Muianga by Aurélio Muianga
July 15, 2025
in Climate
Reading Time: 3 mins read
0
Mozambique Receives Millions in Compensation for Damage Caused by Extreme Climatic Events
0
SHARES
178
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on Whatsapp

- In 2022 and 2023, insurance companies paid a total of nine million US dollars to the Mozambican government, to compensate for damage caused by natural disasters

By Aurélio Muianga

Maputo (MOZTIMES) – The World Bank has paid an annual sovereign insurance premium, which will allow the Mozambican government to receive millions of dollars in compensation to recover from damage caused by extreme climatic events, in the rainy and cyclone season that begins in October.

Xavier Chavane, of the Disaster Risk Management sector in the World Bank office in Mozambique, confirmed that this international financial institution has already paid the total sum of the annual sovereign insurance premium, which is four million US dollars. 

Sign in to read more

The consortium of insurance companies which will cover the damage caused by natural disasters in Mozambique, in the period from October 2024 to April 2025, consists of EMOSE, the Mozambican insurance company controlled by the Mozambican government, Hollard, the largest private insurance group in South Africa, and the Portuguese-Mozambican company Fidelidade Ímpar.

The compensation to be paid to the Mozambican government could reach a maximum of 38 million dollars, if the country is hit by a major natural disaster, on the scale of Cyclone Idai (which hit Mozambique in 2019), according to George Mathonsi, a representative of the consortium formed by Aires Seguros and Pula, which is advising the Mozambicann government on the implementation of sovereign insurance.

This is the third consecutive year in which the World Bank has paid the sovereign insurance premium to cover the risks caused by cyclones and rains in Mozambique. The country is affected cyclically by natural disasters, including cyclones and floods, with devastating effects on households and on the economy. 

Tropical cyclone Freddy, the last large scale cyclone to hit Mozambique (between February and March 2023), affected ten of the country’s 11 provinces, with an impact on more than 1.18 million people. It displaced almost 192,000 people and caused the deaths of 183 others, in addition to the destruction of thousands of houses and public infrastructures.

Mozambique created its sovereign insurance in 2022, to help compensate for the damage caused by natural disasters. Since then, the World Bank has paid an annual insurance premium of four million US dollars, running to a total of 12 million dollars between 2022 and 2024. 

As a result, the Mozambican government received monetary compensation which reached nine million dollars in the first two years of the insurance. We have yet to see how much it may receive after the passage of the 2024/25 rainy and cyclone season.

“In the period 2022/23 [the first year of implementation of disaster insurance] the Mozambican government received compensation of 58.3 million meticais from the consortium of insurance companies formed by EMOSE and Hollard Seguros”, said Mathonsi, in an interview.  “In the second year of insurance (2023/24), the consortium of insurance companies formed by Aris Seguros and Pula (of Kenya) compensated the government with 526.4 million meticais”, he added. 

The value of the compensation is directly proportional to the damage caused by the disasters. This, if an extreme climatic event, categorised as level 10, the highest in the scale defined in the insurance policy, occurs, the Mozambican government will be compensated with a maximum of 38 million dollars, about ten times the value of the premium. 

The maximum compensation sum is very little to repair the damage caused by an extreme climatic event, such as tropical cyclone Idai, which hit Mozambique in March 2019, affecting more than 1.85 million people and causing more than 500 deaths. But it is better than nothing. 

According to Mathonsi, the insurance contract between the Government and the World Bank determines that 80% of the compensation covers the risk of tropical cyclones, and 20% is intended to cover rainfall. The decision to allocate a greater percentage of the insurance compensation to cover tropical cyclones was taken bearing in mind the frequency of these phenomena, such as the cases of Idai and Freddy, which have a major impact.

The creation of disaster insurance in Mozambique resulted from a study made by the African Risk View (ARC), an insurance agency of the African Union (AU), together with a Technical Working Group, consisting of staff from Mozambican government agencies, namely the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Managment Institute (IND), the National Meteorology Institute, the Ministry of Public Works and Housing and the Eduardo Mondlane University. (AM)

Previous Post

Fallout from Chang’s conviction

Next Post

Mozambique Opposes Leave to Appeal for Privinvest

Next Post
Mozambique Opposes Leave to Appeal for Privinvest

Mozambique Opposes Leave to Appeal for Privinvest

Please login to join discussion

Search by categories

  • Business
  • Climate
  • Crime
  • Crime and Corruption
  • Economia
  • Editorial
  • Election 2024
  • Eleições
  • Fact Check
  • Features
  • Gender
  • Género
  • Investigation
  • Oil and Gas
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Politics
  • Security
  • Segurança
  • Sem categoria
  • Terrorism

Search from tags

2024 Budget CABO DELGADO chapo CLIMATE CRIME DEMOCRACY DIALOGUE DYSFUNCTIONAL DEMOCRATIC ELECTIONS ELEIÇÕES 2024 Eleições FAILURE FILIPE NYUSI FLOOD Frelimo Gender GIFIM INCIDENTS KIDNAPPED Manhiça MILITARY MOZAMBIQUE MOZAMBIQUE ELECTIONS Moçambique MUNICIPAL ELECTIONS NORTHERN MOZAMBIQUE PEOPLE PODEMOS PODEMOSELEIÇÕES POLICE POLÍCIA POST-ELECTION PRESS FREEDOM VIOLATIONS PROTESTS PÓS-ELEITORAL RAINY SEASON RWANDA SADC SECURITY TERRORISM VENÂNCIO MONDLANE VIOLENCE VOTING World Bank

Category

  • Business
  • Climate
  • Crime
  • Crime and Corruption
  • Economia
  • Editorial
  • Election 2024
  • Eleições
  • Fact Check
  • Features
  • Gender
  • Género
  • Investigation
  • Oil and Gas
  • Opinion
  • Politics
  • Politics
  • Security
  • Segurança
  • Sem categoria
  • Terrorism

Recent Posts

  • Chapo on Visit to European Union Headquarters, but New Security Agreement Unlikely March 19, 2026
  • Navy Accused of Killing 13 Fishermen This Sunday in Mocímboa da Praia March 16, 2026
  • Turkish Businessmen Paid 300,000 meticais to Buy Mozambican Citizenship, Says Indictment March 16, 2026
  • Chapo visits Brussels while Rwanda Threatens to Withdraw Troops from Cabo Delgado March 16, 2026

© 2024 The Mozambique Times, All rights reserved

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

  • Login
  • Sign Up
Forgot Password?
Lost your password? Please enter your username or email address. You will receive a link to create a new password via email.
body::-webkit-scrollbar { width: 7px; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-track { border-radius: 10px; background: #f0f0f0; } body::-webkit-scrollbar-thumb { border-radius: 50px; background: #dfdbdb }
    0
      0
      Seu carrinho
      Seu carrinho está vazioReturn to Shop
      To find out your shipping cost , Please proceed to checkout.
      Continuar comprando
          Products you might like
          Products you might like
          • Gold
            Gold
            1100,00 $
          • Silver
            Silver
            600,00 $
          • Platinum
            Platinum
            2000,00 $
          • Preço por artigo
            Preço por artigo
            20,00 $
          • Bronze:
            Bronze:
            250,00 $
          No Result
          View All Result
          • Home
          • Politics
            • Elections
          • Security
            • Terrorism
            • Crime and Corruption
          • Economy
          • Oil and Gas
          • Gender
          • Climate
          • Investigation
          • Opinion
          • Fact Check
          • MOZCAST
          • Advertise here
          • enENG
            • pt PT
            • en ENG

          © 2024 The Mozambique Times, All rights reserved

          Are you sure want to unlock this post?
          Unlock left : 0
          Are you sure want to cancel subscription?