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Insurers Reviewing Black Sea Ship Cover After Russia Quits Grain Deal: Sources

By | July 17, 2023

Insurers are reviewing whether to freeze cover for any ships willing to sail to Ukraine after Russia on Monday quit a U.N.-backed deal that allows the export of grain through a wartime Black Sea safe corridor, industry sources said.

The agreement, brokered by Turkey last July, aimed to alleviate a global food crisis by allowing Ukrainian grain blocked by Russia’s February 2022 invasion of its neighbor to be exported safely.

“Due to the collapse of the Black Sea corridor deal, most shipowners will now refrain from calling Ukrainian ports,” said Christian Vinther Christensen, chief operating officer with Danish shipping group NORDEN.

The last ship left Ukraine under the deal on Sunday.

Insurance has been vital to ensure shipments through the corridor and industry sources said Russia’s decision was being evaluated in terms of whether cover in some form could continue.

“Some underwriters will look to take advantage with a hefty increase in rates. Others will stop offering cover. The (key) question is whether Russia mines the area which would effectively cease any form of cover being offered,” one insurance industry source said.

The Lloyd’s of London insurance market has already placed the Black Sea region on its high risk list.

“Annual cover remains in place but voyages to listed areas will be assessed individually as and when seen,” said Neil Roberts, head of marine and aviation at Lloyd’s Market Association (LMA), which represents the interests of all underwriting businesses in Lloyd’s.

Additional war risk insurance premiums, which are charged when entering the Black Sea area, need to be renewed every seven days. They already cost thousands of dollars and are expected to go up, while shipowners could prove reluctant to allow their vessels to enter a war zone without Russia’s agreement.

“I don’t believe there are many enquiries at the moment as getting an owner to operate on past charter terms without an initiative would be difficult,” another industry source said.

“Danger money hire rates would probably be required, aside from the provision for extra insurance costs.”

Moscow’s withdrawal from the deal means “the guarantees for the safety of navigation issued by the Russian side will be revoked,” Russia told the U.N. shipping agency the International Maritime Organization on Monday in a letter seen by Reuters.

The LMA’s Roberts said the letter “adopts a tone that diverges from previous pronouncements.”

“From the insurance angle, quotes for corridor voyages would have expired, so renegotiation of terms should be expected,” he said.

“With the withdrawal of the Russian security guarantees, the risk profile would need to be re-assessed. It may also be the case that some charterers will reconsider their options.”

(Reporting by Jonathan Saul; editing by Grant McCool)

Photograph: Bulk carrier ARGO I is docked at the grain terminal of the port of Odessa, Ukraine, on April 10, 2023. Photo credit: Bo Amstrup/Ritzau Scanpix/AFP/Getty Images

Topics Carriers Russia

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