2026 -- H 7752 | |
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LC004360 | |
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STATE OF RHODE ISLAND | |
IN GENERAL ASSEMBLY | |
JANUARY SESSION, A.D. 2026 | |
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A N A C T | |
RELATING TO COURTS AND CIVIL PROCEDURE--PROCEDURE IN PARTICULAR | |
ACTIONS -- CLIMATE DISASTER ACTIONS | |
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Introduced By: Representatives Cortvriend, Boylan, Speakman, Handy, Carson, McGaw, | |
Date Introduced: February 12, 2026 | |
Referred To: House Judiciary | |
It is enacted by the General Assembly as follows: | |
1 | SECTION 1. Legislative findings and purpose. |
2 | The general assembly finds and declares that: |
3 | (a)(1) Rhode Island is experiencing increasing harm from climate driven extreme weather |
4 | events, including coastal flooding, storm surge, sea level rise, extreme precipitation, wind damage, |
5 | heat, and related secondary impacts that threaten public health, safety, infrastructure, housing, and |
6 | economic stability. |
7 | (2) These climate impacts have contributed to rising property and casualty insurance losses, |
8 | increased premiums, policy non-renewals, market contraction, and growing pressure on residual |
9 | and reinsurance mechanisms, placing undue financial strain on Rhode Island residents, businesses, |
10 | municipalities, and taxpayers. |
11 | (3) For decades, certain fossil fuel companies possessed knowledge of the climate impacts |
12 | associated with the extraction, marketing, and combustion of their products, yet engaged in |
13 | misleading, deceptive, or false representations that obscured those risks, delayed public |
14 | understanding, and impeded timely action. |
15 | (4) Rhode Island has a compelling interest in stabilizing its insurance markets, protecting |
16 | ratepayers, preserving access to coverage, and ensuring that entities whose deceptive conduct |
17 | substantially contributed to climate related harms bear an equitable share of resulting costs. |
18 | (5) Providing clear causes of action for injured persons and insurers, including subrogation |
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1 | rights, will promote accountability, reduce pressure for rate increases and public subsidies, and |
2 | support long term insurance affordability. |
3 | (b) The purpose of this act is to: |
4 | (1) Create private rights of action for climate-related harms; |
5 | (2) Authorize insurer recovery and subrogation; |
6 | (3) Ensure recoveries benefit policyholders; and |
7 | (4) Strengthen the stability of Rhode Island’s insurance markets. |
8 | SECTION 2. Title 10 of the General Laws entitled "COURTS AND CIVIL PROCEDURE |
9 | — PROCEDURE IN PARTICULAR ACTIONS" is hereby amended by adding thereto the |
10 | following chapter: |
11 | CHAPTER 22 |
12 | CLIMATE DISASTER ACTIONS |
13 | 10-22-1. Definitions. |
14 | For purposes of this chapter: |
15 | (1) “Climate disaster” means an event that meets any of the following threshold |
16 | qualifications and is determined by impact attribution science or extreme event attribution science |
17 | to be substantially worsened or caused by climate change from responsible parties’ fossil fuel |
18 | products, or extreme weather or other events attributable to climate change from responsible |
19 | parties’ fossil fuel products: |
20 | (i) A natural catastrophe, including a hurricane, tornado, storm, high water, wind-driven |
21 | water, tidal wave, tsunami, earthquake, volcanic eruption, landslide, mudslide, snowstorm, or |
22 | drought, or, regardless of cause, a fire, flood, or explosion, that, in the determination of the |
23 | President of the United States causes damage of sufficient severity and magnitude to warrant major |
24 | disaster assistance under the federal Robert T. Stafford Disaster Relief and Emergency Assistance |
25 | Act, as amended (Pub. L. 93-288) to supplement the efforts and available resources of states, local |
26 | governments, and disaster relief organizations in alleviating the damage, loss, hardship, or suffering |
27 | caused by the catastrophe. |
28 | (ii) A catastrophic incident that is a natural or manmade incident that results in |
29 | extraordinary levels of mass casualties, damage, or disruption severely affecting the population, |
30 | infrastructure, environment, economy, national morale, or government functions. A catastrophic |
31 | incident could result in sustained national impacts over a prolonged period, almost immediately |
32 | exceeds resources normally available to local, state, tribal, and private sector authorities in the |
33 | impacted area, and significantly interrupts governmental operations and emergency services to such |
34 | an extent that national security could be threatened. A catastrophic incident does not include an |
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1 | event linked to terrorism. |
2 | (iii) An event that qualifies, or would have qualified, for inclusion on the federal National |
3 | Centers for Environmental Information’s “Billion-Dollar Weather and Climate Disasters” program |
4 | and data list as it existed in December 2024. |
5 | (iv) A state of emergency or local emergency as defined in chapter 15 of title 30. |
6 | (v) An event or occurrence linked to extreme weather or other events attributable to climate |
7 | change for which insurance claims in the aggregate across carriers in this state exceed one hundred |
8 | million dollars ($100,000,000). |
9 | (2) “Climate-attributable harm” means physical damage, economic loss, business |
10 | interruption, insurance losses, or other measurable injury resulting from a climate disaster. |
11 | (3) “Fossil fuel product” includes crude petroleum oil and all other hydrocarbons, |
12 | regardless of gravity, that are produced at the wellhead in liquid form by ordinary production |
13 | methods, natural, manufactured, mixed, and byproduct hydrocarbon gas, refined crude oil, crude |
14 | tops, topped crude, processed crude, processed crude petroleum, residue from crude petroleum, |
15 | cracking stock, uncracked fuel oil, fuel oil, treated crude oil, residuum, gas oil, casinghead gasoline, |
16 | natural-gas gasoline, kerosene, benzine, wash oil, waste oil, blended gasoline, lubricating oil, and |
17 | blends or mixtures of oil with one or more liquid products or byproducts derived from oil or gas. |
18 | (4)(i) “Responsible party” means any corporation, company, partnership, association, or |
19 | other entity that: |
20 | (A) Extracted, produced, refined, marketed, or sold fossil fuel products; and |
21 | (B) Engaged in misleading, deceptive, or false statements or omissions regarding the |
22 | climate impacts of those products; and |
23 | (C) Whose conduct is shown to have substantially contributed to climate-attributable harm |
24 | in Rhode Island. |
25 | (ii) “Responsible party” does not include the federal government, tribal governments, the |
26 | state, a political subdivision of the federal, tribal, or state government, or an employee of the |
27 | federal, tribal, or state government on the basis of acts or omissions in the course of official duties. |
28 | (5) “Insurer” includes any admitted property or casualty insurer authorized to do business |
29 | in Rhode Island, the Rhode Island joint reinsurance association, and any successor or residual |
30 | market entity. |
31 | 10-22-2. Private right of action for climate attributable harm. |
32 | (a) Any individual, business, nonprofit organization, municipality, or other political |
33 | subdivision that suffers climate-attributable harm in Rhode Island may bring a civil action against |
34 | one or more responsible parties. |
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1 | (b) Standard of liability. A responsible party shall be strictly liable for climate-attributable |
2 | harm where the plaintiff establishes that the responsible party engaged in misleading or deceptive |
3 | conduct regarding climate impacts and that such conduct was a substantial contributing factor to |
4 | the harm. |
5 | (c) Damages. Recoverable damages shall include, but are not limited to: |
6 | (1) Property damage and loss of use; |
7 | (2) Economic loss and business interruption; |
8 | (3) Costs of repair, remediation, adaptation, or relocation; |
9 | (4) Reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs; and |
10 | (5) Punitive damages where authorized by law. |
11 | (d) Statute of limitations. An action shall be commenced within three (3) years after the |
12 | plaintiff knew or reasonably should have known of the climate attributable harm. |
13 | (e) Defenses. No claim shall be barred by the doctrine of assumption of the risk or by |
14 | contractual choice of law provisions where the defendant’s misleading or deceptive conduct is |
15 | established. |
16 | 10-22-3. Direct cause of action for insurers. |
17 | (a) An insurer that has paid claims or incurred increased costs because of climate- |
18 | attributable harm in Rhode Island may bring a direct civil action against one or more responsible |
19 | parties to recover: |
20 | (1) Paid claims; |
21 | (2) Increased reinsurance or capital costs; and |
22 | (3) Costs associated with market destabilization, including non-renewals and residual |
23 | market exposure. |
24 | (b) Liability under this section shall be strict, subject to the same standards set forth in § |
25 | 10-22-2. |
26 | (c) Recoveries under this section shall be used to support insurer solvency and market |
27 | stability and shall be reflected pursuant to § 10-22-5. |
28 | 10-22-4. Subrogation and independent assessment. |
29 | (a) Insurers, including the Rhode Island joint reinsurance association, shall retain and are |
30 | expressly authorized to exercise subrogation rights against responsible parties for climate- |
31 | attributable harms. |
32 | (b) Prior to initiating large-scale subrogation litigation, the insurance commissioner shall |
33 | obtain or conduct an independent actuarial and legal assessment evaluating whether the expected |
34 | benefits of such action outweigh the anticipated costs and risks. |
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1 | (c) Where the assessment determines that subrogation is likely to produce net benefits for |
2 | policyholders and market stability, the commissioner may require or authorize the exercise of |
3 | subrogation rights. |
4 | 10-22-5. Ratepayer protection and rate regulation. |
5 | (a) Any recovery obtained by an insurer pursuant to this chapter, whether through |
6 | judgment, settlement, or subrogation, shall be considered in property and casualty rate filings and |
7 | used to offset losses or reduce future rate increases. |
8 | (b) The director of the department of business regulation shall adopt rules and regulations |
9 | to ensure that recoveries are equitably credited to policyholders and do not result in duplicative or |
10 | excessive rates. |
11 | 10-22-6. Relationship with other laws. |
12 | Nothing in this chapter shall be construed to preempt or limit: |
13 | (1) Enforcement actions by the attorney general; |
14 | (2) Claims brought under consumer protection, environmental, or common law; or |
15 | (3) The authority of the insurance commissioner under existing law. |
16 | 10-22-7. Severability. |
17 | If any provision of this chapter, or the application of a provision to any person or |
18 | circumstances shall be held invalid, the remainder of the chapter, and the application of the |
19 | provision to persons or circumstances other than those as to which it is held invalid, shall not be |
20 | affected by that invalidity. |
21 | SECTION 3. This act shall take effect upon passage. |
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LC004360 | |
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EXPLANATION | |
BY THE LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL | |
OF | |
A N A C T | |
RELATING TO COURTS AND CIVIL PROCEDURE--PROCEDURE IN PARTICULAR | |
ACTIONS -- CLIMATE DISASTER ACTIONS | |
*** | |
1 | This act would create a legal cause of action for climate attributable harm during climate |
2 | disasters caused by responsible parties. “Responsible party” means any corporation, company, |
3 | partnership, association, or other entity that extracted, produced, refined, marketed, or sold fossil |
4 | fuel products and engaged in misleading, deceptive, or false statements or omissions regarding the |
5 | climate impacts of those products. The act would impose strict liability on a responsible party |
6 | whose conduct substantially contributed to climate-attributable harm. The act also would provide |
7 | a cause of action for insurers to recover losses sustained resulting from the climate disaster caused |
8 | by a responsible party. |
9 | This act would take effect upon passage. |
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LC004360 | |
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