CONGRESS APPROVES REAUTHORIZATION OF TERRORISM RISK INSURANCE ACT

On Jan. 8, 2015, Congress reauthorized the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA), the federal terrorism risk insurance backstop. TRIA was allowed to expire on Dec. 31, 2014. The bill will be effective as soon as the president signs it, an action that is expected in early January 2015.


What is Terrorism Risk Insurance?

TRIA was originally enacted in the wake of the 9/11 attacks due to concerns that terrorism insurance had become too scarce and expensive. TRIA established a government reinsurance system, also known as the federal backstop, which allows the insurance industry and federal government to share the losses created by a catastrophic terrorist attack. In exchange for the support of the federal backstop, covered insurers must offer terrorism risk insurance with terms, amounts and other coverage limitations similar to non-terrorism insurance.


Since its enactment, TRIA has brought stability to the insurance industry by allowing insurers to more effectively manage their risk portfolios and determine their potential liability. As a result, covered insurers have been able to offer terrorism coverage at affordable prices, despite the continued threat of terrorist attacks.

The new bill extends TRIA for an additional six years through 2020, and maintains TRIA’s core function while gradually expanding the insurance industry’s responsibility for paying for acts of terrorism.


Revisions to TRIA
The new bill extends TRIA for an additional six years through 2020, and maintains the core function of TRIA while gradually expanding the insurance industry’s responsibility for paying for acts of terrorism. The bill contains annual increases in the amount of total losses from a certified act of terrorism required before TRIA’s backstop kicks in from $100 million to $200 million. The bill also increases the federal government’s mandatory recoupment from $27.5 to $37.5 billion. Additionally, the bill raises the private industry total recoupment of covered losses from 133 percent to 140 percent.


Significance
TRIA’s renewal brings stability to the property and casualty insurance market. It is welcome news for the real estate, construction and hospitality industries, all of which depend on terrorism risk insurance as a precondition to finance developments and to maintain operations. In the absence of TRIA, a reported 750,000 private insurance policies were canceled because their creation depended on the existence of the federal backstop. While terrorism risk insurance remained available after TRIA expired, many expected considerable price increases for these policies. TRIA’s extension also brings more certainty to the workers’ compensation insurance marketplace. Insurers that offer workers’ compensation coverage are required by law to include coverage for injuries caused by terrorism.


Additional Provisions
Among the bill provisions unrelated to the TRIA program is a provision that creates the National Association of Registered Agents and Brokers, an organization that would establish standards that insurance producers would have to meet in order to do business in other states—a departure from the current system that requires producers to meet requirements in their home states and every other state in which they operate.


The bill also contains an unrelated measure that exempts farmers, ranchers, small businesses and other nonfinancial end users of derivatives from capital requirements created by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act.