Realistic depiction of storm-ravaged alpine village after Storm Johannes, with fallen trees, power outages, ski damage, and heavy snowfall from Storm Anna approaching on New Year's Eve.
Realistic depiction of storm-ravaged alpine village after Storm Johannes, with fallen trees, power outages, ski damage, and heavy snowfall from Storm Anna approaching on New Year's Eve.
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Storms Johannes and Anna: Detailed insurance coverage amid new snowfall threats

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Following Storm Johannes's devastation—with fallen trees, power outages, and disruptions like cruise chaos and ski resort damage—insurance covers most home impacts, expert Peter Stark confirms. As recovery continues, impending Storm Anna risks further isolation via extreme New Year's snowfall.

Recovery from Storm Johannes, which hit northern and central Sweden on December 28-29 with fierce winds rivaling past storms, remains challenging. Thousands of homes faced tree damage, severed power lines, and outages, alongside incidents like a near-miss tree fall on a resident's car, chaotic cruise conditions at sea, and unprecedented destruction at Kungsberget ski resort.

Upcoming Storm Anna threatens the southern Norrland coast on New Year's Day with heavy to extreme snowfall, potentially isolating vulnerable areas further.

Insurance expert Peter Stark at Konsumenternas Försäkringsbyrå emphasizes broad coverage under home, villa, or holiday home policies, as force majeure does not apply to predictable storms. Key coverages include:

  • Trees or flagpoles falling on homes (even at lower speeds), pipe bursts from outages, spoiled food, and electronics damaged by power surges upon restoration.

Exclusions or limitations:

  • Tree/flagpole removal costs (owner's expense).

  • Smaller structures like greenhouses/sheds (case-by-case, unless all-risk policy).

Compensation may be reduced for negligence, such as failing to secure awnings or loose items before known storms. Stark advises prompt damage assessment by insurers.

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