Business Day

War risk premiums rise for ships

• Insurance premiums increase for shipments through the high-risk Red Sea area after attacks by Yemen’s Houthi on merchant vessels

- Jonathan Saul

War risk insurance premiums for shipments through the Red Sea are rising after further attacks on merchant vessels by Yemen’s Houthi movement and the expectatio­n that ships with a UK or US connection will be targeted, insurance sources said on Tuesday.

The Iran-aligned Houthis, who are well-equipped and trained, have launched multiple attacks on ships in the Red Sea since November. They will expand their targets to include US ships, a Houthi official said on Monday.

Even before the recent Houthi attacks, the London insurance market listed the southern Red Sea among its high-risk areas.

Ships need to notify their insurers when sailing through such areas and pay an additional premium, which until earlier in January was typically for a seven-day cover period.

Insurance industry sources said that war risk premiums have risen to about 1% of the value of a ship, from about 0.7% last week, with various discounts applied by underwrite­rs. They added that rates are expected to rise. This translates into hundreds of thousands of dollars of additional costs for a seven-day voyage.

The terms being offered for war risk quotes are now significan­tly shorter, “with 24 hours being the norm”, said Munro Anderson, head of operations at marine war risk and insurance specialist Vessel Protect, which is part of Pen Underwriti­ng.

“Rates are increasing, which is reflective of the significan­t and opaque risk exposure within the Red Sea,” he said.

“Since the naval and air strikes in Yemen, it is now broadly considered that, in addition to Israeli-connected vessels, there is an elevated threat to vessels associated with the UK, US, including dependent flags, as well as those connected to Australia, the Netherland­s, Bahrain and Canada,” he added, referring to a US-led navy coalition trying to safeguard commercial shipping.

US-based operator Eagle Bulk Shipping said on Monday one of its vessels was hit by an “unidentifi­ed projectile” while sailing 160km off the Gulf of Aden.

“The Houthi attacks are encompassi­ng all vessels with less and less clear criteria,” an insurance source said. “US and UK flags are advised now that they should not go through the Red Sea.”

The Houthi militant group, which controls the most populous areas of Yemen after nearly a decade of war against the Western-backed and Saudi-led coalition, has emerged as a strong supporter of the Palestinia­n Islamist group Hamas in the latter’s war against Israel.

In recent days, commercial ships have halted voyages through the Red Sea, with more taking the longer voyage via Cape Town.

“With tensions rising in the

Red Sea, the cost of transporti­ng goods globally will increase and inevitably trickle down to the end consumer,” said Nicole Hudson, director at supply chain platform e2open.

Due to a combinatio­n of higher insurance rates and rising fees for using the Suez Canal, it is becoming cheaper to take the longer route, which could also mean less certainty over delivery times, shipping sources said.

“Ship owners and charterers may find that rerouting around Africa is more cost-effective than incurring the combined costs of Suez Canal transit fees and insurance premiums,” broker Clarksons Securities said in a note this week.

The US-led coalition is weak because regional powerhouse­s Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Egypt do not take part, Yemen’s vice-president said on Tuesday.

“If the US-led coalition fails to thwart further attacks and ensure the freedom of navigation in the region, we anticipate that war insurance coverage will become unavailabl­e, forcing most of the traffic to use the much longer route around the Cape of Good Hope,” ratings service Morningsta­r DBRS said in a note on Monday.

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