Commission approves Danish Terror Insurance Scheme

Published: 13 January 2010 y., Wednesday

Rašymas
The European Commission has authorised, under EU State aid rules, a measure adopted by Denmark which provides a state guarantee on non-life insurance against damages stemming from nuclear, biological, chemical or radioactive (NBCR) terrorist attacks that exceed a certain threshold. The Commission found that the measure was an appropriate means of ensuring that insurance coverage against NBCR risks would be available in Denmark and approved the measure under Article 107 3 (c) of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU), that allows under certain conditions aid for the development of certain economic activities. In particular, the measure is designed to be self-funding and concerns insurance cover that is currently insufficiently available on the private market.

Competition Commissioner Neelie Kroes said: "Today's decision shows that the Commission and Member States can work together on important public policy goals. The decision will ensure that insurance coverage against certain terrorist risks is available on the Danish market, while at the same time ensuring that state aid and Single Market rules are respected."

Denmark considers it an important public policy goal that Danish citizens and enterprises have access to insurance against NBCR risks. However, the global reinsurance market for low probability but high impact events such as a NBCR attack is underdeveloped and as a result there is insufficient reinsurance capacity for Danish insurers that wish to provide this cover in Denmark.

In order to ensure that NBCR coverage is available, Denmark plans to introduce a state guarantee. Under the scheme, insurers that provide NBCR insurance in Denmark will be liable for non-life damages up to a certain pre-determined threshold. The risk retained by the insurance industry is based on their capital base and the availability of NBCR reinsurance on the global market. This threshold will be reviewed every year and currently stands at DKK 5 billion. The Danish state then provides a guarantee for the next DKK 15 billion of losses that exceed this threshold.

Insurers will pay a fee for this guarantee, currently set at 0.15% of the guarantee amount (but which can vary according to the level of the threshold). Furthermore, in the event of a payout on the guarantee, Denmark will recover this payout over time from all policyholders through a levy.

The Commission has concluded that the measure complies with the conditions laid down in Article 107 3 (c) of the TFEU. The scheme favours the provision of insurance cover in an area where no or insufficient cover would otherwise be available. The aid is appropriate, necessary and proportional to alleviate the market failure in the area of NBCR coverage.

The scheme also has a limited impact on competition. The scheme is open to all Danish and foreign non-life insurance companies. Finally, the own risk retained by the insurance industry is recalculated on an annual basis. If in future the market for NBCR coverage develops, and greater reinsurance capacity is available on international markets, the insurers' own risk retention will increase and the threshold as of which the state would have to compensate losses will rise. At some point this threshold could become so high that it could become uneconomical for insurers to avail of the state reinsurance, which has a minimum fee. In this way the scheme has an inbuilt review mechanism which ensures that the state is not replacing private market operators. This will ensure that the distortions of competition are minimised.

 

Šaltinis: europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Preventing fresh terror

EU calls for preventive action against growing risk of terrorist attacks using chemical, biological and nuclear weapons. more »

ATM skimming gang arrested in Greece

Greek authorities in northern Greece have neutralized a gang of Bulgarians who authorities say was swindling money off unsuspecting customers by copying bank details. more »

Pöttering condemns latest ordeal of Burma's Aung San Suu Kyi

The President of the European Parliament, Hans-Gert Pöttering has spoken out about the impending trial of Burma's pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi. more »

Freedom, justice, security: a balancing act

Closer cooperation between EU countries on the agenda for justice and home affairs. more »

ATM fraud and the top threats FIs are facing

The Heartland Payment Systems data breach may be the fraud story of year, but ATM and debit card thefts are growing. more »

Train passes over woman on tracks

This closed-circuit footage, aired on Israel's Channel 2, shows the moments leading up to an apparent suicide attempt. The woman, circled on the right of the train tracks, is seen wandering for a while and then approaches the railway. more »

Beyond the ATM: 1,250 debit cards skimmed at Subway in Canada

Police said that 201 of the skimmed debit cards had been used for unauthorized financial transactions. more »

Four Eastern Europeans charged in $1.8 million ATM scam

Four men who were living in Florida allegedly made trips to Cicero, Rochester and New York City to install skimming devices on ATMs. more »

Turkish wedding ends in massacre

It should have been a day of celebrations for the bride and groom getting married in the south-east Turkish village of Bilge. It turned into a bloodbath as a gang of gunmen opened fire on the guests. more »

“Yellow shirt” chief shot in Bangkok

The founder of Thailand's “yellow shirt” protest movement Sondhi Limthongul had a bullet removed from his head after being shot early on Friday, but is not thought to be in a critical condition. more »