Allianz Risk Barometer 2022: Cyber perils outrank Covid-19 and broken supply chains as top Africa and Middle East business risk

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  • 11th Allianz survey: Cyber, business interruption and pandemic outbreak are the top three business risks in Africa and Middle East in 2022.
  • Pandemic outbreak drops from first to third in Africa and Middle East and second to fourth position globally as majority of companies are less concerned and feel adequately prepared for future outbreaks.
  • Political risks and violence is still a major concern in Africa and Middle East as it moves from sixth to fourthย due to the number, scale and duration of riots and protests.
  • AGCS CEO Joachim Mueller: โ€œโ€™Business interruptedโ€™ will likely remain the key underlying risk theme for this year. Building resilience is becoming a competitive advantage for companies.โ€

Johannesburg/London/Munich/New York/Paris/Sao Paulo/Singapore, January 18, 2022

Cyber perils are the biggest concern for companies in Africa and Middle East, South Africa, Nigeria and around the world in 2022, according to theย Allianz Risk Barometerย which launches on January 18, 2022. The threat of ransomware attacks, data breaches or major IT outages worries companies even more than business and supply chain disruption, natural disasters or the Covid-19 pandemic, all of which have heavily affected firms in the past year

Globally, cyber incidents tops the Allianz Risk Barometer for only the second time in the surveyโ€™s history (44% of responses),ย Business interruptionย drops to a close second (42%) andย Natural catastrophesย ranks third (25%), up from sixth in 2021.ย Climate changeย climbs to its highest-ever ranking of sixth (17%, up from ninth), whileย Pandemic outbreakย drops to fourth (22%). The annual survey from Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty (AGCS) incorporates the views of 2,650 experts in 89 countries and territories, including CEOs, risk managers, brokers and insurance experts.ย View the full global and country risk rankings.ย Watch the video.

โ€œโ€™Business interruptedโ€™ will likely remain the key underlying risk theme in 2022,โ€ AGCS CEO Joachim Mueller summarizes. โ€œFor most companies the biggest fear is not being able to produce their products or deliver their services. 2021 saw unprecedented levels of disruption, caused by various triggers. Crippling cyber-attacks, the supply chain impact from many climate change-related weather events, as well as pandemic-related manufacturing problems and transport bottlenecks wreaked havoc. This year only promises a gradual easing of the situation, although further Covid-19-related problems cannot be ruled out. Building resilience against the many causes of business interruption is increasingly becoming a competitive advantage for companies.โ€

Violence, changes in legislation and regulation rising concerns in Africa and Middle East

Political risks and violence and changes in legislation and regulationย are rising concerns for businesses in Africa and Middle East. Political risks and violence moved from sixth to fourth due to the number, scale and duration of riots and protests such as civil unrest and looting in South Africa. Changes in legislation and regulationย moves up three places for fifth in the region.

โ€œFortunately, large scale terrorism events have declined drastically in the last five years. However, the number, scale and duration ofย riots and protestsย in the last two years is staggeringย and we have seen businesses suffering significant losses,โ€ says Bjoern Reusswig, Head of Global Political Violence and Hostile Environment Solutions at AGCS. โ€œCivil unrest has soared, driven by protests on issues ranging from economic hardship to police brutality which have affected citizens around the world. And the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic is making things worse โ€“ withย little sign of an end to theย economic downturn in sight,ย the number ofย protestsย isย likely to continue climbing.โ€

โ€œPreparation is key โ€“ in particular for exposed sectors such as retail,โ€ explains Thusang Mahlangu AGCS Africa CEO. โ€œBusinesses need to review theirย business continuity plansย (BCP)ย andย should be aware of what is happening around them.ย Typically, these only focus on national catastrophes, but there is a need for BCP plans to address political disturbances and other types of business disruption like cyber.ย Having defined, and preferably tested, procedures in place is crucial โ€“ these should include staff, client and general communication and social media plans. It is imperative for companies to think deeply about how they can best protect their assets and people.โ€

Ransomware drives cyber concerns while awareness of BI vulnerabilities grows

Cyber incidentsย ranks as a top three peril in most countries and regions surveyed including Africa and Middle East, South Africa and Nigeria. It also ranks second in Ghana, fourth in Morocco and Namibia, fifth in Kenya and seventh in Turkey, The main driver is the recent surge inย ransomware attacks, which are confirmed as the top cyber threat for the year ahead by survey respondents (57%). Recent attacks have shownย worrying trendsย such as โ€˜double extortionโ€™ tactics combining the encryption of systems with data breaches; exploiting software vulnerabilities which potentially affect thousands of companies (for example,ย Log4J,ย Kaseya) or targeting physical critical infrastructure (the Colonial pipeline in the US). Cyber security also ranks as companiesโ€™ major environmental, social and governance (ESG) concern with respondents acknowledging the need to build resilience and plan for future outages or face the growing consequences from regulators, investors and other stakeholders.

โ€œRansomware has become a big business for cyber criminals, who are refining their tactics, lowering the barriers to entry for as little as a $40 subscription and little technological knowledge. The commercialization of cyber crime makes it easier to exploit vulnerabilities on a massive scale.ย We will see more attacks against technology supply chains and critical infrastructure,โ€ explains Scott Sayce, Global Head of Cyber at AGCS.

Business interruptionย (BI) ranks as the second most concerning risk globally and Africa and Middle East, South Africa, Madagascar and Turkey. However, it ranked first in Ghana, Kenya, Morocco and Namibia. In a year marked by widespread disruption, the extent of vulnerabilities in modern supply chains and production networks is more obvious than ever. According to the survey, the most feared cause of BI is cyber incidents, reflecting the rise in ransomware attacks but also the impact of companiesโ€™ growing reliance on digitalization and the shift to remote working. Natural catastrophes and pandemic are the two other important triggers for BI in the view of respondents.

In the past year post-lockdown surges in demand have combined with disruption to production and logistics, as Covid-19 outbreaks in Asia closed factories and caused record congestion levels in container shipping ports. Pandemic-related delays compounded other supply chain issues, such as the Suez Canal blockage or the global shortage of semiconductors after plant closures in Taiwan, Japan and Texas from weather events and fires.

โ€œThe pandemic has exposed the extent of interconnectivity in modern supply chains and how multiple unrelated events can come together to create widespread disruption. For the first time the resilience of supply chains has been tested to breaking point on a global scale,โ€ says Philip Beblo, Property Industry Lead, Technology, Media and Telecoms, at AGCS.

According to the recentย Euler Hermes Global Trade Report, the Covid-19 pandemic will likely drive high levels of supply chain disruption into the second half of 2022, although mismatches in global demand and supply and container shipping capacity are eventually predicted to ease, assuming no further unexpected developments.

Awareness of BI risks is becoming an important strategic issue across entire companies. โ€œThere is a growing willingness among top management to bring more transparency to supply chains with organizations investing in tools and working with data to better understand the risks and create inventories, redundancies and contingency plans for business continuity,โ€ says Maarten van der Zwaag, Global Head of Property Risk Consulting at AGCS.

Pandemic preparations improve. Next up โ€“ making businesses more weatherproof

Pandemic outbreakย remains a major concern for companies but drops from first to third position in Africa and Middle East and from second to fourth globally (although the survey predated the emergence of the Omicron variant). The risk is ranked in the top three inย  Ghana, Kenya, and Namibia. While the Covid-19 crisis continues to overshadow the economic outlook in many industries, encouragingly, businesses do feel they have adapted well. The majority of respondents (80%) think they are adequately or well-prepared for a future incident. Improving business continuity management is the main action companies are taking to make them more resilient.

The rise ofย Natural catastrophesย andย Climate changeย to third and sixth position globally respectively is telling, with both upwards trends closely related. Recent years have shown the frequency and severity of weather events are increasing due to global warming. For 2021, global insured catastrophe losses were well in excess of $100bn โ€“ the fourth highest year on record. Hurricane Ida in the US may have been the costliest event, but more than half of the losses came from so-called secondary perils such as floods, heavy rain, thunderstorms, tornados and even winter freezes, which can often be local but increasingly costly events. Examples included Winter Storm Uri in Texas, the low-pressure weather system Bernd, which triggered catastrophic flooding in Germany and Benelux countries, the heavy flooding in Zhengzhou, China, and heatwaves and bushfires in Canada and California.

Allianz Risk Barometerย respondents are most concerned about climate-change related weather events causing damage to corporate property (57%), followed by BI and supply chain impact (41%). However, they are also worried about managing the transition of their businesses to a low-carbon economy (36%), fulfilling complex regulation and reporting requirements and avoiding potential litigation risks for not adequately taking action to address climate change (34%).

โ€œThe pressure on businesses to act on climate change has increased noticeably over the past year, with a growing focus on net-zero contributions,โ€ observes Line Hestvik, Chief Sustainability Officer at Allianz SE. โ€œThere is a clear trend for companies towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions in operations or exploring business opportunities for climate-friendly technologies and sustainable products. In the coming years, many corporate decision-makers will be looking even more closely at the impact of climate risks in their value chain and taking appropriate precautions. Many companies are building up dedicated competencies around climate risk mitigation, bringing together both risk management and sustainability experts.โ€

Businesses also have to become more weatherproof against extreme events such as hurricanes or flooding. โ€œPrevious once-in-a-century-events may well occur more frequently in future and also in regions which were considered โ€˜safeโ€™ in the past. Both buildings and business continuity planning need to become more robust in response,โ€ says van der Zwaag.

Other risers and fallers in this yearโ€™s Allianz Risk Barometer:

  • Shortage of skilled workforceย (13%) is a new entry in the top 10 risks at number nine.ย  Attracting and retaining workers has rarely been more challenging. Respondents rank this as a top five risk in the engineering,ย construction, real estate, public service and healthcare sectors, and as the top risk for transportation.
  • Changes in legislation and regulationย remains fifth (19%) globally but moves up three places to fifth in Africa and Middle East. Prominent regulatory initiatives on companiesโ€™ radars in 2022 include anti-competitive practices targeting big tech, as well as sustainability initiatives with the EU taxonomy scheme.
  • Fire and explosionย (17%)ย is a perennial risk for companies, ranking seventh as in last yearโ€™s survey.ย Market developmentsย (15%) falls from fourth to eighth year-on-year globally but moves up two places to seventh in Africa and Middle East.ย Macroeconomic developmentsย (11%) falls from eighth to 10thย and from fourth to seventh in Africa and Middle East.

For further information please contact:

Johannesburg: Lesiba Sethogaย +27 112147948ย ย ย lesiba.sethoga@allianz.com

London: Ailsa Sayersย ย +44 203 451 3391ย ย ailsa.sayers@allianz.com

Munich: Heidi Polkeย ย +49 89 3800 14303ย ย heidi.polke@allianz.com
Daniel Aschoffย ย +49 89 3800 18900ย ย daniel.aschoff@allianz.com

New York: Sabrina Glavanย +1 973 876 3902ย ย sabrina.glavan@agcs.allianz.com

Paris: Florence Claretย ย ย +33 158 85 88 63ย ย florence.claret@allianz.com

Rotterdam: Olivia Smithย ย +27 11 214 7928ย ย ย olivia.smith@allianz.com

Sao Paulo: Camila Corsiniย +55 11 3527 0235ย ย camila.corsini@allianz.com

Singapore: Wendy Kohย ย +65 6395 3796ย ย ย ย wendy.koh@allianz.com

About Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty

Allianz Global Corporate & Specialty (AGCS) is a leading global corporate insurance carrier and a key business unit of Allianz Group. We provide risk consultancy, Property-Casualty insurance solutions and alternative risk transfer for a wide spectrum of commercial, corporate and specialty risks across 10 dedicated lines of business