Business Standard

Launching into space? Not so fast. Insurers baulk at new coverage

- NOOR ZAINAB HUSSAIN & CAROLYN COHN 1 September

An ever-swelling amount of space debris is threatenin­g satellites that hover around Earth, making insurers leery of offering coverage to the devices that transmit texts, maps, videos and scientific data, industry sources said.

Thousands of new satellites are being launched into areas where orbital rubbish has been accumulati­ng since early space missions nearly 65 years ago. The surging collision risks have left the handful of insurers that offer satellite coverage pulling back or exiting the market, executives and analysts said.

"This is a real issue for insurance," said Richard Parker, co-founder of Assure Space.

Over a year ago, the company stopped providing spacecraft insurance in the Low Earth Orbit (LEO) where most satellites operate. The few policies it has sold since then exclude collision damage.

There are 8,055 satellites roaming Earth's orbits, 42 per cent of them inactive, according to Seradata, which tracks the statistics. Most operate in the LEO, which extends 2,000 kilometers, or 1,243 miles, beyond Earth.

The number of active satellites has jumped 68 per cent from a year ago and more than 200 per cent from five years ago. Much of the new activity has come from billionair­e Elon Musk's Spacex, as it expands its Starlink broadband network.

Spacex did not reply to requests for comment. As a privately held company, it does not disclose whether its satellites are insured.

Other major companies including Google, Apple and Amazon also rely on satellites to transmit data, as do telecom providers, government agencies and universiti­es working on space research, insurance sources said.

Space coverage has been a lucrative niche for insurers, which took in $475 million in gross premiums to cover satellites, rockets and unmanned space flights last year and paid just $425 million in losses, according to Seradata.

Space premiums are 10-20 times aviation premiums, said Peter Elson, CEO of insurance broker Gallagher Aerospace.

Mess in space

The insurance dilemma underlines a greater problem: no one is cleaning up the mess in space.

Government agencies track thousands of pieces of debris, including inside a "graveyard orbit" where old geostation­ary orbit (GEO) satellites are sent to die with their last bits of fuel, 36,000 kilometers, or 22,370 miles into space.

LEO satellites are much smaller than GEO satellites.

Typically the size of a small refrigerat­or, they need $500,000 to $1 million worth of coverage, far below the $200 million to $300 million for those in the GEO, industry experts said.

Historical­ly, policies have protected devices against loss, failure or damage from launch through their orbiting life, but not revenue losses from outages. Operators could add liability coverage in case one satellite damages another or re-enters the atmosphere in a way that causes damage or injury on the ground.

Only 11 spacecraft have suffered a partial or total failure due to suspected debris strikes over the past decade, according to Seradata. Yet because insurers predict risks over the life of current and future policies, space underwrite­rs fret over doomsday scenarios years ahead.

Wetton cited the possibilit­y of a "Kessler effect," named for NASA space debris expert Don Kessler who developed the theory in 1978. It anticipate­s LEO becoming so crowded that there is a cascade of collisions.

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Spacex conducts test launch of SN15 starship prototype. A large number of recent satellite launches has been conducted by Spacex
PHOTO: REUTERS Spacex conducts test launch of SN15 starship prototype. A large number of recent satellite launches has been conducted by Spacex

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