From cyber to climate: The forces reshaping risk in 2026 and beyond
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The risk landscape is shifting faster than ever
Today’s top insurance risks
55%
Cyber incidents
45%
Business interruption
45%
New technologies
42%
Natural catastrophes
39%
Legal system abuse/pressures
The real challenge – and opportunity – is in understanding how these forces intersect. A cyber event can trigger operational disruption, a climate event can cascade through supply chains, and legal inflation can magnify losses well beyond the initial event. Navigating this environment requires more than traditional risk transfer. It calls for integrated thinking, deep expertise, and a forward-looking approach that brings clarity and stability to an increasingly uncertain world.
The takeaway is clear: risk is no longer linear. It’s interconnected, compounding, and increasingly costly.
Looking ahead, the risk picture evolves – but the interconnectedness remains.
- Natural catastrophes rise to #1 at 52%, reflecting escalating climate-driven losses.
- Cyber remains entrenched at 47%, fueled by expanding digital infrastructure.
- New technologies at 44% and business interruption at 37% continue to shape operational resilience.
- PFAS liability emerges, cited by nearly 20% overall and 37% of U.S. carriers.
These findings align with global research showing rising disaster costs, expanding digital dependencies, and growing long-tail environmental liabilities.
Why this matters
The data underscores a fundamental truth: risk is no longer defined by single events but by the ripple effects they create. A cyber incident can halt operations. A climate event can trigger litigation. A new technology can expose entire supply chains. And environmental liabilities can unfold over decades.
Organizations that understand these linkages – and plan for them – will be the ones that stay ahead.