Aviation insurance is insurance coverage geared specifically to
the operation of aircraft and the risks involved in aviation. Aviation
insurance policies are distinctly different from those for other areas
of transportation and tend to incorporate aviation terminology, as well
as terminology, limits and clauses specific to aviation insurance.
Aviation Insurance was first introduced in the early years of the 20th Century. The first aviation insurance policy was written by Lloyd's of London
in 1911. The company stopped writing aviation policies in 1912 after
bad weather and the resulting crashes at an air meet caused losses on
many of those first policies.
The first aviation polices were underwritten by the marine insurance underwriting community. The first specialist aviation insurers emerged in 1924.
In 1929 the Warsaw convention
was signed. The convention was an agreement to establish terms,
conditions and limitations of liability for carriage by air, this was
the first recognition of the airline industry as we know it today.
In 1931, Captain A. G. Lamplugh, the British Aviation Insurance
Company's chief underwriter and principal surveyor, said of the new
industry: "Aviation in itself is not inherently dangerous. But to an
even greater degree than the sea, it is terribly unforgiving of any
carelessness, incapacity or neglect."
Realising that there should be a specialist industry sector, the
International Union of Marine Insurance (IUMI) first set up an aviation
committee and later in 1933 created the International Union of Aviation
Insurers (IUAI), made up of eight European aviation insurance companies
and pools.
The London insurance market is still the largest single centre for
aviation insurance. The market is made up of the traditional Lloyd's of
London syndicates and numerous other traditional insurance markets.
Throughout the rest of the world there are national markets established
in various countries, this is dependent on the aviation activity within
each country, the US has a large percentage of the world's general
aviation fleet and has a large established market.
No single insurer has the resources to retain a risk the size of a
major airline, or even a substantial proportion of such a risk. The
catastrophic nature of aviation insurance can be measured in the number
of losses that have cost insurers hundreds of millions of dollars (Aviation accidents and incidents).
Most airlines arrange "fleet policies" to cover all aircraft they own or operate.
Description above from the Wikipedia article Aviation insurance,More
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