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India’s Union Cabinet approved the creation of the Bharat Maritime Insurance (BMI) Pool on April 18–19, 2026, providing a sovereign guarantee of Rs 12,980 crore to ensure continuity of maritime insurance cover amid a spike in premiums following the West Asia conflict.
The pool will underwrite Hull & Machinery, Cargo, Protection & Indemnity (P&I) and war risks for Indian-flagged vessels and ships carrying goods to and from Indian ports, using a combined underwriting capacity of roughly Rs 950 crore among member insurers.
The government said the move aims to shield trade from sudden withdrawals or price shocks by global insurers and reinsurers, reduce dependence on International Group P&I clubs, and develop domestic marine underwriting and claims expertise.
Industry sources note freight and insurance costs have surged since February 28, with war-risk premiums in some zones rising sharply.
While experts welcome the initiative’s potential to stabilise costs and protect exporters, some warn that the pool’s initial capacity may be insufficient for very large vessels and extreme loss scenarios, and that the sovereign guarantee exposes the government to contingent fiscal risks.
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WION (World is One News)India launches Rs 12,980 Cr maritime insurance pool amid West Asia conflict







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