. 24/7 Space News .
Sciemus And Liberty Syndicates Revolutionise Sat Insurance

by Staff Writers
Farnborough, UK (SPX) Jan 19, 2006
Sciemus is delighted to announce a partnership with Liberty Syndicates in the creation of a new offering for the satellite insurance market.

Liberty Syndicates has formed a new consortium, called LibSat, on the strength of SpaceRAT which has demonstrated the potential to create substantial savings for some satellite operators. Andre Finn, CEO and co-founder of Sciemus Ltd said: "We are delighted that this new partnership with Liberty could reduce premiums by as much as $10m per year for some operators."

LibSat and its reinsurers will provide initial capacity of up to $250 million rising to $400m over the next few years to cover operators of communications satellites. At this level LibSat as a single entity has the capability to underwrite the entirety of even the largest satellite fleet. This informed capacity combined with technical analysis, in place of experience based analysis, provides satellite operators with an alternative to the subscription market.

Sean Dalton, CEO of Liberty, said: "This represents the largest single source of new capacity made to the industry, which hitherto has suffered from an inability to differentiate between good and bad operators. The model will enable differentiation between good and bad risk within the satellite sector and price to reflect the risk. Operators will be able to see the benefit in terms of significant cost savings and certainty."

Benefits

Operators with superior control over key processes such as satellite procurement, deployment, and operation have effectively been subsidising their competitors' premiums because of underwriters' difficulty in differentiating the lower risks from the rest of the market. Now significant savings will be available because SpaceRAT allows the underwriters at LibSat to price their policies to reflect the technical risk of satellite failure.

In addition to providing technical risk analysis through SpaceRAT, Sciemus is also addressing the technical quality of insurance contracts with the aim of providing an improved degree of certainty.

Sciemus partners with select industry participants who share its enthusiasm for reduced volatility, risk based pricing, improved policy wordings, less litigation and improved customer service.

Sciemus was founded in 2003 as a joint venture with QinetiQ to commercialise a risk analysis capability for insurance. Sciemus creates pricing and analytical tools for the non-life insurance industry which allow the accurate assessment of risk and price of any insurable asset. Its suite of risk-assessment tools combine novel analytical methodologies with rich sources of data.

SpaceRAT (Risk Assessment Tool) is Sciemus' system to quantify risks associated with geostationary communications satellites. The system uses an extensive database of satellites to produce a risk profile for each critical component. These then form the basis of the risk profile of the spacecraft itself. The SpaceRAT database is currently the most comprehensive database of satellite performance available anywhere in the world. It includes all satellites insured over the last 40 years. Related Links



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


As Terrestrial Telecoms Dial Into Satellite Networks
Rome, Italy (SPX) Jan 18, 2006
Improving the integration of satellite networks with more traditional terrestrial telephone infrastructures, will help next generation telephony move from concept towards reality, as researchers are demonstrating.







  • Clipper Spacecraft Constructor To Be Announced In February 2006
  • NASA Restructures Aeronautics Research
  • Manned Spaceflight Plans For India To The ISS And Beyond
  • NASA Refines Design For Crew Exploration Vehicle

  • Ancient Mega Asteroid Dusted Earth
  • Spirit At Arad
  • Martian Snow Source of Tropical Glaciers, Research Team Reports
  • Festoons And Ferric Sulfate Salts Keep Rovers Occupied

  • JAXA Delays H2A Launch Land Observing Satellite Daichi
  • Telesat Chooses ILS To Launch Nimiq 4 On Proton Vehicle
  • Rundown Of This Year's Launch Activities At Esrange
  • ISRO To Commercialise Launch Vehicle Technology

  • TIGER Innovators Enhance North-South Collaboration
  • EPA Obtains Agencywide Access To GlobeXplorer Online Earth Imagery Services
  • New Legislation Initiated To Support Commercial Remote Sensing Industry
  • Indian Small EO Satellites To Study Atmosphere

  • LockMart Thermoelectric Generator Powers NASA Pluto New Horizons Probe
  • Spacecraft Bound For Pluto Supported By Aerojet Propulsion
  • NASA Launches Spacecraft To Pluto, The Kuipers And Stars Beyond
  • NASA Delays Pluto Probe Launch Again

  • Cartwheel Galaxy Makes Waves In New NASA Image
  • Astronomers Detect Largest Cluster Of Red Supergiants
  • Integral Identifies Supernova Rate For Milky Way
  • Large Survey Of Galaxies Yields New Findings On Star Formation

  • Jack Skis The Moon
  • Engineer Who Has Name On Moon Dies
  • Apollo Chronicles
  • An Explosion On The Moon

  • ESA, Galileo Industries Seal Deal For First 4 Galileo Sats
  • GLONASS To Have 18 Satellites In Orbit In 2008
  • Galileo Sends First Signals Based On Alcatel Alenia Space's Tech
  • EU, South Korea Seal Galileo Agreement

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement