Home insurers in California may soon be able to use computerized processes that simulate thousands of possible natural catastrophes to help them set rates — but only if they commit to doing a significant amount of business in areas at high risk for wildfires.

Since 1988, the state’s Proposition 103 has largely prevented insurers from using a forward-looking process called catastrophe modeling. Instead of setting rates based on estimated future losses, insurers in California have had to rely on data from the previous 20 years.

Originally published on insurify.com, part of the BLOX Digital Content Exchange.