Bharat Maritime Insurance Pool: Sovereign-Backed Cover for Indian Shipping
The Union Cabinet has approved the Bharat Maritime Insurance Pool with a Rs 12,980 crore sovereign guarantee to provide continuous Hull, Cargo, P&I and War-risk cover for Indian shipping. The move reduces dependence on foreign reinsurers and is timed against ongoing Strait of Hormuz tensions.
The Union Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, approved the creation of the Bharat Maritime Insurance Pool (BMI Pool) on 18 April 2026. The decision was widely discussed and analysed in policy circles on 19 April 2026, especially because it comes during a period of acute strain on global shipping caused by the ongoing tensions in the Strait of Hormuz.
The pool is backed by a sovereign guarantee of Rs 12,980 crore. It will cover four classes of maritime risks — Hull and Machinery, Cargo, Protection and Indemnity (P&I) and War risk. Member insurers will jointly write policies for Indian-flagged or Indian-controlled vessels, as well as foreign vessels carrying cargo to or from Indian ports. The combined underwriting capacity of the pool will be around Rs 950 crore, with General Insurance Corporation of India (GIC Re) acting as the administrator.
The economic logic is straightforward. India's maritime trade carries over 70 per cent of the country's trade by volume and around 95 per cent by value, but Indian shipping has long depended on the International Group of Protection and Indemnity Clubs and other foreign reinsurers for high-end cover. Whenever sanctions, war-risk premiums or insurer withdrawals hit a corridor like the Strait of Hormuz, freight costs and insurance premiums for Indian importers spike, hurting the current account.
The BMI Pool is therefore both a strategic-autonomy measure and a financial-stability tool. It mirrors similar national pools used by the UK, Japan and South Korea. Critics will watch how the pool prices war-risk cover, whether private insurers join meaningfully, and how the sovereign guarantee is invoked. India has also been investing in Indian-flagged tonnage and ports under the Sagarmala and Maritime Amrit Kaal Vision frameworks, of which this insurance pool is a complementary piece.
Exam angle: Expect questions on the sovereign guarantee figure (Rs 12,980 crore), the four risk classes (Hull, Cargo, P&I, War), GIC Re's role, the share of maritime trade in India's overall trade, and how the pool reduces dependence on foreign reinsurers. Ties in with UPSC GS-3 (economy, infrastructure), Banking GA and SSC GS.
Key Points to Remember
- Cabinet approval announced on 18 April 2026; widely covered on 19 April 2026.
- Sovereign guarantee: Rs 12,980 crore.
- Risks covered: Hull and Machinery, Cargo, Protection and Indemnity (P&I), War.
- Combined underwriting capacity of pool: around Rs 950 crore; administrator: GIC Re.
- Coverage: Indian-flagged or Indian-controlled vessels and foreign vessels trading with Indian ports.
- Maritime trade carries over 70% of India's trade by volume and around 95% by value.
- Designed to reduce dependence on foreign reinsurers like the International Group of P&I Clubs.
Exam Relevance
Important for UPSC GS-3 (economy, external sector, strategic autonomy) and Banking/SSC GA — the figures, the risk classes and the GIC Re role are directly question-worthy.
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