GAO: terrorism-insurance coverage still a challenge in
high-risk areas.
While commercial property terrorism-insurance coverage appears to
be available nationwide at rates policyholders view as reasonable,
certain policyholders may face challenges in obtaining desired amounts
of coverage at reasonable prices, concluded a report by the Government
Accountability Office (GAO) in July.
The report--Initial Results on Availability of Terrorism Insurance
in Specific Geographic Markets--noted that policyholders experiencing
these insurance-coverage challenges were typically those that own large,
high-value properties in areas where many large buildings are clustered.
Urban areas, in particular--such as Manhattan--are viewed as at
high risk of attack, and to a lesser extent certain areas of other major
cities, such as Chicago and San Francisco, noted GAO.
The GAO study was expressly mandated by Congress as part of
legislation passed at the end of last year to reauthorize the federal
terrorism-insurance backstop for damage done as a result of acts of
foreign terrorism.
The Terrorism Risk Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of 2007
(TRIPRA) again extends the original Terrorism Risk Insurance Act of 2002
(TRIA) for an additional seven years, through the end of 2014.
To address challenges in obtaining terrorism-insurance coverage,
the GAO report noted that policyholders reported taking a variety of
approaches.
Some policyholders, for example, purchased coverage from a large
number of insurers in complex insurance programs, adding to what can be
a time-consuming and onerous process for policyholders and their
insurance brokers.
Others purchased coverage in a separate policy rather than as part
of an overall property-insurance package--which policyholders said may
be more costly--or still others self-insured. Policyholders told GAO
that, through such approaches, they have generally been able to meet
their current requirements for terrorism-insurance coverage.
They also attributed their ability to obtain coverage, as did
insurers and industry analysts, to the TRIA program, with some industry
participants citing the current "soft" or competitive
insurance market as contributing to availability, said GAO.
"While TRIA limits insurers' financial exposure related
to future terrorist attacks, several insurers said they remained
concerned about the exposure they retain, and their efforts to minimize
potential losses appear to be the primary reason some policyholders face
challenges in obtaining coverage," stated the GAO report.
"Insurers said they seek to mitigate potential losses from a single
terrorism event by limiting the amount of property coverage that they
offer in specific areas of cities," the report noted.
Those areas of concern include downtown locations or financial
districts where many large buildings are clustered, or in specific areas
of cities considered to be at high risk of attack, such as parts of
Manhattan. These exposure limits, said GAO, generally make obtaining
coverage more difficult or costly for certain policyholders in these
areas.
The GAO report offered no recommendations even as it noted that
insurance industry participants and analysts had no consensus on whether
TRIA should be modified or additional actions taken to increase the
availability of terrorism-insurance coverage.
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