About Us

IMRA
IMRA
IMRA

 

Subscribe

Search


...................................................................................................................................................


Tuesday, May 1, 2012
Indian State Insurer Willing to Cover Ships Carrying Iranian Crude

Indian State Insurer Willing to Cover Ships Carrying Iranian Crude
News number: 9102110038 10:22 | 2012-05-01
http://english.farsnews.com/newstext.php?nn=9102110038

TEHRAN (FNA)- State-run General Insurance Corp. of India (GIC) came forward
to provide third-party liability cover of up to $50 million (around Rs.250
crore) for ships bringing crude from Iran.

"GIC communicated to Indian ship owners last week saying that they are
willing to provide liability cover of up to $50 million against collision
and oil spills on a per-voyage basis," said Sunil Thapar, a director looking
after the bulk carriers and tankers business at the state-run Shipping Corp.
of India Ltd (SCI).

"Accordingly, GIC has instructed all four state-run insurance
companies-United India Insurance Co. Ltd, New India Assurance Co. Ltd,
National Insurance Co. Ltd and Oriental Insurance Co. Ltd-to get the product
approved by Irda," said P.V. Kulkarni, a vice-president looking after
insurance at SCI, India's biggest ocean carrier. Irda, or the Insurance
Regulatory and Development Authority, is the insurance industry regulator.

Irda approval will activate India's first third-party liability insurance
cover for ships, a business dominated by European insurers.

India, which depends on imports for about 80% of its energy needs, buys
14-15 million tons of crude oil a year from Iran, the biggest supplier of
the fuel to the country after Saudi Arabia.

The EU is seeking to curb Iran's oil trade to press Tehran to shut its
civilian nuclear program. The sanctions will prevent European insurers and
reinsurers from indemnifying ships carrying Iranian petrochemicals from May
and crude and oil products from July.

Iran is the second largest producer in the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries and has the second largest oil and gas reserves in the
world.

In shipping, third-party liabilities such as oil pollution, wreck removal
and damage to port property are commonly referred to as protection and
indemnity (P&I). This is separate from insurance covers for a ship's hull
and machinery.

Globally, such third-party risks are insured with the International Group of
Protection and Indemnity Clubs (IG Clubs), a 13-member group based in London
that provides covers for oil pollution and wreck removal for at least 95% of
the world's ocean-going ships by capacity. Many Indian ships are covered by
IG Clubs.

Under the proposed EU sanctions against Iran, the IG Clubs will no longer be
able to provide this cover to ships that haul Iranian oil from 1 July.

"Indian ship-owners who continue to engage in the trade of Iranian oil will
be required to make alternative insurance arrangements due to the impending
prohibition on the provision of insurance cover," said David Bolomini, an
executive at the International Group of P&I Clubs. "EU insurers domiciled,
incorporated or regulated will be caught by the prohibition and this will
cut off the group's reinsurance arrangements to all 13 member Clubs of the
IG."

Although some say that the cover the GIC has proposed is far less than the
$1 billion cover provided by IG Clubs for individual claims against oil
pollution, Shipping Corp.'s chairman and managing director Sabyasachi Hajara
said even a $50 million cover is "okay".

"It is a commercially pragmatic decision to have at least this cover. It is
a very short voyage from Iran to India and over the last 10 years, there
have been virtually no claims in this regard. So even with very limited
cover, it is commercially possible for us to undertake such voyages," Hajara
said.

Search For An Article

....................................................................................................

Contact Us

POB 982 Kfar Sava
Tel 972-9-7604719
Fax 972-3-7255730
email:imra@netvision.net.il IMRA is now also on Twitter
http://twitter.com/IMRA_UPDATES

image004.jpg (8687 bytes)