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Reinsurers Scrap War-Risk Coverage After US Sinks Ship
London-based reinsurers are issuing seven-day cancellation notices on marine war-risk coverage after a US submarine torpedoed an Iranian warship off Sri Lanka, amplifying risk perception, according to people familiar with the matter.
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lamplighter
Joined 2013/04/13Visited 2026/03/07
Status: user
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Pickled Pete opened the pandora's box.
Heckuva job stinky.
#1 | Posted by Nixon at 2026-03-06 03:21 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 2
More from the article ...
... Shipping lines can seek to reinstate coverage through buybacks once policies lapse, but the cost of doing so has surged beyond typical wartime adjustments, the people said, asking not to be identified because the information is private. Rates that usually climb up to 50% in wartime have instead tripled in some cases -- rising to $750,000 per vessel from $250,000, they said. ...
Rates that usually climb up to 50% in wartime have instead tripled in some cases -- rising to $750,000 per vessel from $250,000, they said. ...
#2 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-03-06 03:24 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 2
Sinking a ship in international waters an undeclared war is clearly a war crime.
War cannot be insured. War crimes are definitely uninsurable.
AI Overview Standard insurance policies almost universally contain "war exclusion" clauses, meaning damage, liability, or losses directly caused by war, declared or undeclared, acts of foreign enemies, or hostilities are not covered. These risks are considered uninsurable due to their catastrophic, unpredictable, and widespread nature, which could bankrupt insurers.
#3 | Posted by donnerboy at 2026-03-06 03:37 PM | Reply | Funny: 1 | Newsworthy 4
Wow, they only have to give 7 days notice?
#4 | Posted by eberly at 2026-03-06 03:57 PM | Reply
Wow, they only have to give 7 days notice? #4 | Posted by eberly
I believe it was seven days from the start of the decapitation attack in Iran to the sinking of the unrelated-to-regime-change and out-of-theater Iranian frigate.
So the timing is perhaps a deliberate reflection on how fast Trump is escalating the global threat the United States poses to the security of international waters.
The United States murderimg hundreds on dozens of "drug" boats that could never reach the US is probably a factor here as well.
#5 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-03-06 06:28 PM | Reply | Funny: 1 | Newsworthy 3
Anything to distract from Trump raping children.
#6 | Posted by ClownShack at 2026-03-06 07:03 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 2
Oil price up moving cost of shipping up. Shipping insurance unavailable. Tariffs up.
Republicans are deliberately crashing the economy.
#7 | Posted by snoofy at 2026-03-06 07:55 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1
#5 | POSTED BY SNOOFY
I am a bit surprised they didn't machine gun the 32 survivors of the submarine attack in floating in the debris and then call them terrorists. And then laugh maniacally.
#8 | Posted by donnerboy at 2026-03-06 08:36 PM | Reply | Newsworthy 1
Just like NAZI FASCIST GERMANY.
They Kill people Indiscriminately who aren't even in the Fight.
Hegseth is a War Criminal.
Lock Him Up.
#9 | Posted by Effeteposer at 2026-03-06 10:04 PM | Reply | Funny: 1 | Newsworthy 2
No worries.
You the American taxpayer will now pay to insure those tankers during Trumpy's totally illegal undeclared war that you did not vote for.
#10 | Posted by donnerboy at 2026-03-07 10:51 AM | Reply | Newsworthy 1
@#7 ... Oil price up ...
The price of Brent Crude (BF=Z) is up around 50% since the beginning of the year.
$60.75 on January 2, 2026 $92.69 on March 6, 2026
#11 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-03-07 12:32 PM | Reply
>according to people familiar with the matter.
archive.is
#12 | Posted by john_savage2 at 2026-03-07 03:00 PM | Reply
GNSS Interference Complicates Navigation as Hormuz Shipping Disruption Deepens (March 2, 2026) insidegnss.com
... Reports of widespread GNSS interference in the Gulf and Strait of Hormuz region are coinciding with a sharp disruption in commercial shipping, turning the area into a real-world test of how resilient maritime navigation and monitoring are when satellite positioning becomes unreliable. Over the last several days, maritime analytics providers have documented interference events affecting more than 1,000 ships in the Middle East Gulf, alongside a growing pattern of AIS anomalies and "dark" operations. At the same time, tanker and container traffic has slowed or stopped near the Strait of Hormuz, and leading war-risk insurers are withdrawing cover for the region. The episode illustrates in practical terms what a contested RF environment means for ships that still rely heavily on satellite-derived position for navigation, tracking and compliance. Interference profile: GPS jamming and AIS spoofing on a regional scale Maritime intelligence firm Windward reports that more than 1,100 vessels experienced GPS and AIS interference across the Middle East Gulf within a single 24-hour period following the outbreak of hostilities between Iran, the United States and Israel. Ships' reported positions were displaced onto airports, inland locations in Iran and the Gulf states, and even over a nuclear power plant, producing track histories that are clearly inconsistent with physical reality. ...
Over the last several days, maritime analytics providers have documented interference events affecting more than 1,000 ships in the Middle East Gulf, alongside a growing pattern of AIS anomalies and "dark" operations. At the same time, tanker and container traffic has slowed or stopped near the Strait of Hormuz, and leading war-risk insurers are withdrawing cover for the region.
The episode illustrates in practical terms what a contested RF environment means for ships that still rely heavily on satellite-derived position for navigation, tracking and compliance.
Interference profile: GPS jamming and AIS spoofing on a regional scale
Maritime intelligence firm Windward reports that more than 1,100 vessels experienced GPS and AIS interference across the Middle East Gulf within a single 24-hour period following the outbreak of hostilities between Iran, the United States and Israel.
Ships' reported positions were displaced onto airports, inland locations in Iran and the Gulf states, and even over a nuclear power plant, producing track histories that are clearly inconsistent with physical reality. ...
#13 | Posted by LampLighter at 2026-03-07 04:10 PM | Reply
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