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Sofia Ashmore

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An Indian man who said he was set on fire by a group of men in Australia, following a spate of attacks on foreign students, was Monday spared jail after admitting to making the claim up.

Jaspreet Singh, 28, pleaded guilty in Melbourne Magistrates Court to making a false report to police over the January incident in which he was left with burns to 30 percent of his body.

Singh had originally told police he had been attacked by four men who poured petrol on him and set him alight. It later emerged he had burned himself after attempting to torch his own car to claim the insurance.

“It’s a very serious and cynical decision you’ve made in the circumstances,” Magistrate Felicity Broughton said, according to the Australian Associated Press. Broughton described Singh’s actions as premeditated and serious, particularly as they came one week after an Indian national was stabbed to death in Melbourne.

But she suspended the eight-month jail term for Singh, who pleaded guilty to criminal damage by arson, making a false report to police and attempting to obtain property by deception. The magistrate said she took into account his guilty plea and was satisfied that he would not re-offend.

Muggings and beatings of Indian students in Australia prompted street protests last year, before 21-year-old Punjab man Nitin Garg was murdered as he walked to work at a Melbourne burger restaurant in January. Singh suffered burns to his arms, feet, neck and face and he spent a month recovering in hospital.

Sydney, May 3, 2010 (AFP)

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Thousands of Indonesians took to the streets of Jakarta on Saturday under a heavy police presence to demand better social security for workers.

Police said about 15,000 security personnel had been deployed as protestors gathered at the capital’s main roundabout before marching to the State Palace, shouting “Today we unite” and “Stop oppression now”. “The social security system in Indonesia is still weak,” Indonesian Workers Association head Saepul Tavip told AFP.

“The system here only covers about 25 percent of the workers. The social security has to cover all workers and even small people,” he said. Muhammad Shihabudin, 26, who works in a car factory, said the marchers were demanding lifelong health insurance and a pension fund. “Many workers at private companies now only receive health insurance while they are still employed. But there is no health insurance after we are out of employment,” Shihabudin said.

Indonesian Metal Workers Federation member Didik Suryanto, 31, called for May Day to be made a holiday. “We contribute a lot to the country’s economy and industry. The government should declare May 1 as a public holiday to honour us better,” Suryanto said near the State Palace. Protestors in front of the palace sang the national anthem and some marched while carrying a banner that read “Realise social justice for all Indonesians”.

Police used water cannon when scuffles broke out with demonstrators near the palace. “There are many provocateurs,” Jakarta police spokesman Boy Rafli Amar said. “Some of them threw water bottles to our water cannon vehicle. So we had to shoot them with water to stop their action. But now it’s largely peaceful,” he said. Workers also gathered in several major cities such as Bandung, Medan, Yogyakarta and Makassar, reports said.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono visited a Toyota car factory on the outskirts of the capital and had lunch with the hundreds of members of staff. He urged that problems between employers and employees should be solved in a peaceful manner. “If there are any problems, then management, union and workers should meet together to solve the case. That’s much better than acts of burning, destroying, and rioting,” Yudhoyono was quoted as saying by state news agency Antara.

Thousands of Indonesian factory workers set fire to cars and dockyard buildings last month in Batam city after an Indian company executive made an insulting remark. Nine people were injured in the incident.

Jakarta, May 1, 2010 (AFP)

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New Zealand has warned travellers of an “extreme risk” of terrorism in India highlighting New Delhi, the venue for the October Commonwealth Games, as a target.

The travel warning, reviewed Saturday, followed similar advice from the US embassy in India which said there were increased indications of imminent attacks. The New Zealand government said there was a significant terrorist threat in India and “heightened concerns that terrorists are planning attacks in New Delhi.”

“New Zealanders are strongly advised to avoid market areas of New Delhi in coming days and weeks,” the advisory added. The warning also said there was an “extreme risk to your security in Jammu, Kashmir, Tripura, Manipur, Assam, Nagaland and along the India-Pakistan international border”, advising against travel in those areas.

New Zealanders living or travelling in India should have comprehensive medical and travel insurance policies that included provision for medical evacuation by air, the warning said. Security concerns about the forthcoming Commonwealth Games were stoked in April when two low-intensity bombs went off at a cricket stadium in the southern city of Bangalore ahead of an Indian Premier League match.

New Zealand cricket representative Ross Taylor was in the ground at the time. In February, a bomb exploded in a packed restaurant popular with travellers in the western Indian city of Pune, killing 16 people, including five foreigners.

Wellington, May 2, 2010 (AFP)

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Deutsche Bank and insurers Allianz and Munich Re could lend Greece one billion euros (1.3 billion dollars) on the same terms as a EU-IMF bailout package, the Financial Times Deutschland reported.

“Deutsche Bank could provide a loan of 500 million euros on the same conditions as those set by the Federal (German) state, Allianz a loan of more than 300 million euros and Munich Re more than 200 million euros,” the newspaper reported in its Monday edition without naming its source.

Eurozone finance ministers approved Sunday a 110-billion-euro loan package for Greece, to be extended over three years by the bloc and the International Monetary Fund. German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schaeuble reportedly met German bank directors over the weekend to get them to contribute to the Greek financial rescue plan.

The business newspaper Handelsblatt quoted sources close to the government as saying Schaeuble wanted “a voluntary commitment” from the banks to buy Greek debt as a “stabilisation measure” aimed at volatile financial markets. Such a move would also help soothe German public opinion, which is currently opposed to helping Athens out of its fiscal jam.

The FTD said Deutsche Bank chief Josef Ackermann was first to respond to the state’s request and that he convinced insurance giant Allianz and the reinsurer Munich Re to follow suit. Berlin had been reluctant to approve an unpopular rescue plan ahead of a key regional election this month. But a poll released Friday found that 53 percent of Germans would accept a Greek rescue if the banks took part.

BERLIN, May 2, 2010 (AFP)

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Over a quarter million individual investors signed up for a pool of seven million shares in Poland’s PZU insurance giant, setting a new record, Poland’s Treasury Minister Aleksander Grad said Thursday.

“We have a new record on our capital market, over 250,000 investors have signed up for shares in PZU,” the minister told reporters in Warsaw. Each investor is entitled to a maximum 30 shares, with each share valued at 312.50 zloty (79.78 euros, 105 dollars) raising over 2.0 billion zloty in capital, Grad told reporter in Warsaw.

The treasury could announce the date of the PZU float on the Warsaw Stock Exchange on May 7 or 8, Grad said Thursday. Earlier official statements pegged May 14 as the first day of trading. The debut of Powszechny Zaklad Ubezpieczien on the Warsaw Stock Exchange is slated to be the largest-ever initial public offering on the exchange set up in 1991 after the 1989 peaceful demise of communism in Poland.

Analysts also say the float will be one of the largest in Europe in recent years. The Polish State Treasury, along with PZU shareholder, Dutch-based insurer Eureko BV, are selling a 30 percent stake in the state-controlled PZU in line with the state’s aim to raise some 7.5 billion euros (10 billion dollars) from the privatisation of state assets to help finance its spending deficit.

Warsaw, April 29, 2010 (AFP)

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Commercial underwriting specialist Evolution Underwriting has announced today the appointment of James Curtin as a commercial underwriter working within the New Business team. Curtin previously worked at Allianz in Maidstone.

His responsibilities include underwriting and servicing new business products to Evolution’s broker base and supporting further growth in the business.

Commenting on the new appointment, Paul Upton, chief executive officer said: “This is a really exciting opportunity for James. We have some strong growth plans for this year and it’s great to be able to find good local talent to help underpin that growth while maintaining the outstanding levels of customer service that have become Evolution’s hallmark.

“We remain clearly focussed on independent regional brokers and this appointment is further evidence of our commitment to servicing their needs to the highest possible standards”.

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Aon Benfield, the world’s premier reinsurance intermediary and capital advisor, is utilizing its groundbreaking FAConnect placement platform to respond to client demand for expanded Chile earthquake capacity.

Through FAConnect, clients can now access up to USD50m cover for any one risk, to be provided by reinsurer Ascot Underwriting in an exclusive agreement. Ascot was the first market to bind a risk via FAConnect, and the new facility builds on Aon Benfield’s successful partnership with the firm. This in addition to the standard market capacity that Aon Benfield can access on behalf of clients.

Elliot Richardson, Chief Executive Officer of Aon Benfield Fac, the facultative reinsurance division of Aon Benfield, said: “Aon Benfield continues to search for additional markets to expand its Chile earthquake offerings underscoring our commitment to respond to our clients needs proactively. We hope that this bold step by Ascot will encourage other market participants to consider similar offerings.”

The Chile earthquake facility is highly flexible in that it is non-restrictive to Occupancy/Class of business, it allows for Primary, Excess of Loss or Proportional Cover and varying periods of risk, and there is no minimum premium requirement. It can be utilized to reinstate cover which may have been exhausted, or indeed to provide a solution in new cover for Chilean business or for Chile exposures as part of a global program. The capacity is in line with standard London market conditions and offers fully defined Chile earthquake cover.

Andrew Brooks, Chief Executive Officer of Ascot Underwriting said: “This facility is an excellent vehicle for Ascot to respond to our customers’ needs for additional capacity. We are delighted to build on an already successful partnership with Aon Benfield and expand our offerings via FAConnect.” The devastating Chilean earthquake which happened on February 27 this year has resulted in at least USD30bn of damage according to Aon Benfield’s Analytics division, and was responsible for more than 500 deaths. Although insurance penetration was far higher than for the preceding Haiti earthquake, there was an immediate demand for greater capacity for earthquake hazard in the region.

Mr Richardson added: “FAConnect is a highly responsive and flexible platform, and it has succeeded in enhancing capacity for the world’s key risks. This new Chilean earthquake facility is just one example of how it is delivering facultative capacity to the marketplace as and when it is required.” FAConnect allows Aon Benfield clients to quote and bind their own facultative risk placements from any internet enabled device in less than five minutes. The platform offers a choice of global markets, and is designed for high volume, lower value transactions, where frictional costs have traditionally made it uneconomical for intermediaries to participate in the sector.

FAConnect users simply log-on and input the risk data to receive an automatic quote from their pre-negotiated market of choice. When the risk is accepted, a Fac Summary Page is generated, detailing coverage, limits, and premium information. Facilities are monitored in real-time to track and report on underwriting rules, overall activity and production. Bordereaux, management reports and other production reports are also available, and first notices of loss can be processed through FAConnect by Aon Benfield claims teams.

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Chedid Re, one of the leading reinsurance brokers in the MENA region, has announced that it has established a new subsidiary in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. The Riyadh-based entity has been licensed by the Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA) to provide reinsurance brokerage services across the Kingdom. The move will enable Chedid Re to capitalize on Saudi Arabia’s fast-growing insurance sector, which has been witnessing significant growth in recent years.

Saudi Arabia has the distinction of being one of the largest insurance markets in the Middle East. With the country’s population projected to reach 45 million by 2020, the demand for insurance products, especially medical and motor insurance, is expected to escalate further, which in turn will positively impact the reinsurance sector.

Chedid Re has underwritten business and entered into contracts of reinsurance as a cover holder on behalf of Lloyd’s of London since 1999. Chedid Re is a significant producer of MENA reinsurance business to the London market across many lines of business including Property, Engineering, Energy, Marine, D&O, Professional Liability, Motor, and BBB. The company’s relationship with London is characterized by double digit CAGR in terms of top and bottom line results.

Farid Chedid, Chairman and CEO of Chedid Re Group of Companies, said, “The outlook for the reinsurance sector in the GCC as a whole and Saudi Arabia in particular continues to remain positive despite the short terms hurdles. Chedid Re has been doing business in the Kingdom since 1998 and by setting up operations here we will be getting closer to our clients in the Kingdom and are better positioned to serve them with the expertise we are renowned for. Moreover, the timing of our entry with enhanced services and in-depth local know-how shows a further commitment from our side to this market.”

Elie Abi Rached, General Manager of Chedid Re in Saudi Arabia, said, “We will be focused on anticipating the growing sophisticated needs of the Saudi Arabian insurance market in terms of product innovation, technical expertise and risk management solutions.”

Chedid Re, which was established in Cyprus in 1998, today delivers comprehensive reinsurance solutions to over 150 insurance companies in the MENA region and Europe through operations in Cyprus, Greece, UAE, Qatar, Lebanon and now in Saudi Arabia. Chedid Re won the ‘2010 Reinsurance Broker of the Year’ award at the Gulf Insurance Awards held in Dubai earlier this year and the ‘2010 Reinsurance Broker of the Year’ award at the 5th Middle East Insurance Awards, thus reinforcing the company’s reputation for offering high quality services, placement of complex and specialized risks, and speed of delivery.

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    The head of the board of Italian investment bank Mediobanca Cesare Geronzi resigned late Monday just two days after taking over the helm of insurance giant Generali, the group said in a communique.

    Vice chairman Dieter Rampl will take his place temporarily until the board convenes on May 10 to approve the chairmanship of Renato Pagliaro, the statement said. Geronzi, 75, is considered a pillar of Italian finance, though he has been embroiled in several bankruptcy proceedings including the Parmalat scandal.

    He was convicted and sentenced to 20 months in prison in 2006 over the collapse of the Italcase real estate group, but acquitted on appeal.

    Rome, April 27, 2010 (AFP)

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    The price of insurance for the aerospace industry looks set to continue to decline in 2010, for the fourth year in a row, finds Aon’s Aerospace Insurance Markets Outlook 2010 report. After 2009’s turbulence, this represents an oasis of relative calm for airports, aerospace manufacturers and support companies.

    2009 saw the continuation of decreasing of steady rates for insurance in the aerospace sector:

    • Airports: 2% decrease in average cost of premium

    Reduced exposure to risks, including falling passenger numbers have played a significant role in the recent premium reductions. Airports in the Middle East are the only ones to have bucked the trend with passenger numbers expected to grow by 11% during the 2009/10 policy period.

    • Manufacturers: holding steady, no change in average cost of premium

    Just over half of aerospace manufacturers are forecasting turnover reductions during the 2009/10 policy period. Maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) operations have a more positive view, with turnover expected to grow by 9% on average.

    • Service Providers: 6% reduction in average cost of premium

    The service provider sector, which is comprised of refuellers, ground-handlers, and airport service providers, saw a fall of 6% for the third consecutive year in the average cost of the premium they paid. Nearly 60% of refuellers forecast a reduction in the amount of fuel they are expecting to supply during the 2009/10 policy period.

    • Age of global fleet: second oldest global fleet since 1989

    The average age of the global fleet held steady at around 13.5 years old during 2009, the second oldest that the global fleet has been since 1989. This reflects falling order books for airframe manufacturers but also explains the positive turnover forecasts coming from the MRO sub-sector.
    “The insurance renewals so far in 2010 indicate that we will see similar trends as 2009, although there is a slight chance that prices could start to rise minimally as the year progresses,” observes Magnus Allan, an aviation analyst in Aon Global Aviation Group.

    “Insurance prices are declining as a result of three factors. Primarily, capacity continues to be strong in the aerospace insurance market. The global economic conditions have also had a significant impact on the aviation industry as a whole, and exposures have declined as aerospace organisations have responded to the new realities. Finally, the sector has also been very proactive in its approach to insurance and risk management, as well as introducing a number of new technologies and approaches that have reduced the level of inherent risk.

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      French financier Antoine Bernheim, stepping down from the helm of Generali on Saturday, charged he was forced out of the Italian insurance giant by foes who used his advanced age as a pretext.

      “It appears that today, at age 85, I am an old man in his dotage,” Bernheim said in an emotional speech to shareholders. Bernheim hands over the reins of Europe’s third largest insurer to Cesare Geronzi, head of Italy’s leading investment bank Mediobanca.

      In a barb aimed at Mediobanca, Generali’s largest shareholder with a stake of 13.2 percent, the Frenchman recalled that Enrico Cuccia was 93 when he gave up the helm of Mediobanca. “It is sad to leave a company after 40 years,” Bernheim said in the speech lasting more than an hour, indicating however that he was prepared to accept a position as honorary chairman — despite having told the French daily Le Figaro that he viewed the offer as an “insult”.

      Frenchman Vincent Bollore, who has a five percent stake in Mediobanca and is the leading foreign shareholder in the bank, was voted Generali’s vice-chairman. Mediobanca’s chief executive Alberto Nagel and entrepreneur Francesco Gaetano Caltagirone were also made vice-chairmen, Generali said in a statement.

      Bernheim joined the board of Generali in 1973, chairing it from 1995 to 1999 and since 2002. A prominent financier in his native France as well, Bernheim helped shape French capitalism from the 1960s to 1990 as an investment banker at Lazard.

      Geronzi, 75, is considered a pillar of Italian finance, though some fear that his brushes with the courts may jeopardise Generali’s reputation. Embroiled in several bankruptcy proceedings including the Parmalat scandal, Geronzi was convicted and sentenced to 20 months in prison in 2006 over the collapse of the Italcase real estate group, but acquitted on appeal.

      Trieste, Italy, April 24, 2010 (AFP)

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      Insurance giant Prudential, which has agreed to buy the Asian arm of troubled US insurer AIG, said Friday its shares were expected to start trading in Hong Kong on May 11.

      London-listed Prudential said in a statement that it has also applied for a secondary listing in Singapore on the same date as its Hong Kong debut. The planned listings in Asia is seen as a move to garner support from regional investors for a 20 billion-dollar rights issue to help fund the acquisition of the AIA group from American International Group (AIG).

      Prudential said terms of the rights issue would be announced on May 5, allowing investors time to digest them before a vote on it in a general meeting held on May 27. “I am pleased to confirm that alongside the AIA transaction, plans for our dual primary listing in Hong Kong are on track,” Tidjane Thiam, Prudential’s group chief executive, said in the statement.

      “The two new listings (in Hong Kong and Singapore) will enable investors in
      Asia to participate in the outstanding growth potential that Prudential offers.” The company said it would keep a primary listing of its shares in London, which “will remain the largest market for our investors”.

      The Hong Kong and Singapore listings will be done by way of introduction, which means adding trading venues without issuing new shares. Prudential has agreed to buy AIA for 35.5 billion US dollars in a deal that will make it the insurance sector’s biggest-ever takeover. The buyout would transform Prudential into the world’s top non-Chinese insurer by market capitalisation, ahead of major competitors Allianz and AXA.

      Hong Kong, April 23, 2010 (AFP)

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        Aon Benfield, the world’s premier reinsurance intermediary and capital advisor, today announces that it has promoted Paul Kaye to Head of Actuarial and Enterprise Risk Management within its International Analytics team.

        Paul is responsible for a team of over 20 in London that helps clients make the most appropriate portfolio management and risk transfer decisions by combining actuarial data with proprietary technology and a thorough understanding of the market. The team also advises on corporate risk tolerance, risk appetite and enterprise risk management.

        He has been with Aon Benfield for ten years and previously worked for Commercial Union/CGU. Paul brings 23 years’ of practical experience ranging from underwriting and reinsurance analysis to strategy and capital modeling for large European and global re/insurance groups.

        The Actuarial team will also be enhanced by the appointments of two new senior actuaries:
        • James Karim brings ten years’ actuarial experience in reinsurance and banking, focusing on specialty lines. He joins from ABN Amro.
        • Thomas Cordier has eight years of experience in non-life actuarial practice and joins from PricewaterhouseCoopers in London. Prior to that he was part of the Tillinghast practice at Towers Perrin in Boston (USA).

        John Moore, Head of Aon Benfield Analytics International, commented: “Paul brings an incredible client focus to the role while working in partnership with our broking teams and driving innovation in areas such as capital management. We’re redefining our clients’ expectations with actuarial interpretation that plays a crucial role in helping re/insurers to manage their balance sheets. We are delighted Paul is leading the team to deliver bespoke analysis and benchmarking to our clients.”

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        New claims for US unemployment insurance benefits fell back last week after a fortnight of increases, the Labour Department said Thursday.

        Initial jobless claims totalled a seasonally adjusted 456,000, the agency reported. That was five percent less than the previous week, when insurance benefits unexpectedly rose, largely due to Easter holiday-related factors.

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          Stephen Cross, CEO of Aon Global Risk Consulting, commented on yesterday the business and insurance implications of the ash cloud that has been causing difficulties across much of Europe.

          Does Business Interruption Insurance cover it?

          “Typically, Business Interruption (BI) insurance policies will most likely not be responding to the disruption to airspace caused by the volcanic ash. BI policies usually only kick in when there is physical damage. If ash falls to Earth and lands on a business’ premises and causes damage – for example blocked-up air pipes could lead to an explosion – then that could trigger a resulting business interruption policy.
          “It is important to note, however, that insurance policies vary and a firm should always ensure they study their own policy language in determining whether they are able to claim on their insurance cover.

          “Aon has been working for some time now with insurers and industry bodies in the London insurance market on bringing Business Interruption cover into the 21st century, developing this product to make it more relevant to today’s world and today’s risks. The ash cloud crisis underlines the importance of this ongoing work.”

          Supply Chain Management

          “Supply chain management becomes a critical area of business in situations such as Europe is experiencing at present. Whilst you can’t plan for every eventuality, especially such rare occurrences as a volcanic eruption, the fundamental principles of sound supply chain management still apply: you should always be aware of what business continuity measures your suppliers of critical inputs have in place and you should have contingency plans around alternative suppliers.

          “Unfortunately, as economies contract or competition increases, lean manufacturing becomes the name of the game, either through Just-in-Time inventory management or through moving to single suppliers in order to generate economies of scale. Such an approach might be highly efficient when things are running smoothly, but in the event of a major disruption event such as this, it can lead to significant delays in key materials and inputs being delivered, or in a worst case scenario to a systemic failure in your supply chain.“

          The silver lining

          “As is often the case in such events as this, there is a silver lining for some firms or sectors. There is an upside for those firms that have invested in rigorous business continuity planning. They will have examined alternative ways of providing their product or service and will come out the other side of a lengthy disruption in a better position than those who haven’t.

          “Similarly, companies in competition to those most adversely affected that have planned for ways to cope with significant and sudden increases in demand will tend to flourish. We are seeing that in the present situation with the sea, rail and vehicle hire firms benefitting from the inability of airlines and air freight companies to operate normally.”

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          Energy insurers will, over the next 10 years, have to deal with drilling and production platforms in ever deeper waters; more complex subsea infrastructure and the increasing use of electric power – both ‘down hole’ and on the seabed. This was the view of Professor Minoo Patel, Director – BPP Technology Services, in a speech to the AEGIS London Energy Conference in Prague on developments for the next decade.

          Professor Patel told his audience that new records would continue to be broken for water depths for drilling and production. While these deep water operations will be expensive, Professor Patel explained that oil production operators were working hard to reduce costs and increase reliability. Professor Patel said: “Oil and gas field developments are reservoir led: you have to work at the water depths at which you find the oil and gas. The North Sea was relatively shallow but there is an exponential change going on in terms of drilling in deeper and deeper water in the Gulf of Mexico, offshore Brazil and other areas around the world.

          “Oil field developments over the last decade have shown that the types of platforms needed to produce from deep water are not converging to a standard type; every development uses a customised platform, different in key respects from its predecessors. This raises very important questions on the balance between an oil field operator’s development risk and the risks taken on by an insurer. All the stakeholders need to have technological insight and agree processes by which risks and business interruptions are minimised.”

          In shallower water, Professor Patel explained the current trend was for the greater use of smaller, cheaper unmanned platforms and operators building more infrastructure underwater and on the seabed rather than sitting it on platforms. This was cheaper and more efficient, he argued. Technological advances mean that more unmanned platforms can now be operated remotely from shore. However, Professor Patel pointed out that the array of equipment underwater was extremely complex and required undersea umbilicals, flowlines and power cables making up an interlocking ‘architecture’. This, he said, had the potential for creating new risks for insurers.

          Speaking about the environmental dimension, Dr Simon Johnson, Director – Aon Environmental Services Group, commented on the proliferation of environmental regulation. He said: “There are now 17,000 different environmental regulations worldwide. The chances are energy operators will fall foul of one of those – even by default.” Dr Johnson examined the environmental risks around carbon capture and the development of offshore wind farms.

          On carbon capture, he said: “The problem with carbon capture is that the carbon might escape. How are companies going to monitor for such escapes? And how are companies going to pay back the carbon credits they earned from capturing it in the first place? Such escapes, if catastrophic, could result in geo-mechanical failures such as settlement or even reactivation of a fault zone. How would the gradual escape of carbon from a storage project affect biodiversity? We just don’t know. Also, there are risks to ground water. The release of carbon into water could create carbonic acid and other contaminants polluting any adjoining aquifer.” Turning to offshore wind turbines, Dr Johnson said: “The development of wind farms offshore is going to be challenging environmentally. We have to do surveys and these include biodiversity. If the development of wind farms and turbines affect fishing, we’re going to have the whole fishing industry making insurance claims.”

          Peter Gray, a partner with law firm Clyde & Co, explained that banks were beginning to make funds available again to energy projects. He said: “The credit crunch affected the ability of banks to lend. However there are now signs of growing confidence among banks and they are lending to energy projects. Their enthusiasm is directed at lending to the right company and the right project in the right country.” Onshore wind projects and solar projects are currently the banks’ most favoured renewable energy investment options, Mr Gray said, followed by PFI waste-to-energy projects. The AEGIS London 2010 European Energy Conference took place on 14-15 April at the InterContinental Hotel, Prague, Czech Republic. Attendees included brokers, risk managers and energy industry representatives from across Europe.

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            London-listed insurer Prudential has been given the green light by the Hong Kong Stock Exchange to list on the city’s bourse, a report said Thursday.

            The bourse’s listing committee vetted Prudential’s plans in a special meeting Wednesday, a day ahead of its regular Thursday session, a person familiar with the situation told Dow Jones Newswires.

            Prudential will be listed by way of introduction, which means adding another trading venue without raising additional funds, as no new shares will be issued, the report said. The Hong Kong Economic Times said in a report Thursday that the listing will take place early May, citing sources close to the deal.

            The insurer said in March that it had accelerated its listing plan in order to have the IPO effective before launching a 20-billion-dollar rights issue. Money from the issue will be used to partly fund its agreed takeover of AIA, the Asian arm of troubled US insurer American International Group (AIG).

            Prudential has agreed to buy AIA for 35.5 billion US dollars in a deal that will make it the insurance sector’s biggest-ever takeover. The buyout would transform Prudential into the world’s top non-Chinese insurer by market capitalisation, ahead of major competitors Allianz and AXA. Prudential plans to keep a primary listing of its shares in London.

            Hong Kong, April 22, 2010 (AFP)

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            The International Monetary Fund has proposed two new global taxes on banks and other financial institutions to cover the cost of future bailouts, the BBC reported Wednesday.

            The measures would see all institutions pay a bank levy as well as a further tax on profits and pay, which would aim to protect against future financial meltdown, the BBC said, citing a leaked IMF report. Governments of the Group of 20 advanced and developing countries — which account for more than 85 percent of the global economy — received the documents Tuesday, the BBC said.

            Finance ministers would discuss the proposals this weekend, it added. Insurers, hedge funds and other financial institutions would also be required to pay the taxes under the IMF proposals, despite the fact they were less implicated in the recent financial crisis. This was to prevent banks reclassifying activities they currently carry out as other services — such as insurance or hedge-fund services — in an effort to avoid the levy. The general levy, called the “financial stability contribution,” would start at a flat rate but would eventually be changed so businesses judged to be riskier paid more, the BBC said.

            Several proposals have been put forward by different governments to cover the costs of future economic rescue packages, including a tax on financial transactions. But many have been reluctant to unilaterally introduce taxes to pay for future bailouts, believing coordinated action is the only option. If governments acted alone, it is feared that institutions would simply move their operations to places with less stringent financial regulation.

            The IMF report, which will form the basis of a submission to the G20 summit in June, states international cooperation in the introduction of the new levies would be “beneficial.” “Countries’ experiences in the recent crisis differ widely and so do their priorities as they emerge from it. But none is immune from the risk of a future — and inevitably global — financial crisis,” it said. “Unilateral actions by governments risk being undermined by tax and regulatory arbitrage.”

            Britain has been pressing for the introduction of a global bank tax and Finance Minister Alistair Darling welcomed the contents of the leaked IMF proposals. “The recognition that banks should make a contribution to the society in which they operate is right,” he said. However, the British Bankers Association was cautious at the prospect of an additional tax, noting that members have already made changes in the fallout from a global crisis which saw several lenders bailed out by the government.

            “UK banks have already made structural changes — as well as being required to hold more cash and capital — to limit future risk,” the BBA said, noting also that “the banks have also historically been major contributors” to government coffers. The reported IMF proposals “seem to be both wide-ranging and significant, covering two types of taxation,” it said. “All taxes have an impact and more tax has more impact. The recommendations need to be carefully examined but we remain concerned about moves which would place the UK industry at a competitive disadvantage internationally.”

            Prime Minister Gordon Brown told the Financial Times newspaper earlier this month that the large economies were getting closer to a deal on the banks. Britain, France and Germany were broadly agreed on the need for a levy, Brown said, adding he hoped the United States would join them. He added that he wanted a deal to be struck at the G20 summit in Seoul in November. French Economy Minister Christine Lagarde said Wednesday that she was happy to hear of the IMF proposals and there was a wide choice of options available.

            London, April 21, 2010 (AFP)

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              Frustrated passengers were braced for a sixth unplanned night in Johannesburg on Tuesday as South African Airways (SAA) cancelled what was to be its first flight to London since Wednesday.

              Passengers of flight SA 3236 voiced frustration, worry and anger at the week of chaos wrought by volcanic ash from last week’s eruption in Iceland, after the airline backed down from resuming flights. “It’s been five nights now and last night I slept on the floor and it looks like I’m sleeping on the floor again tonight,” said a London man who asked not to be named, saying he spent the previous night at the airport.

              “I’ve run out of money because I’ve spent 1,000 pounds (1,539 dollars, 1,141 euros) already on hotels,” he told AFP. SAA announced Tuesday morning that flights to and from London would resume, after a Lufthansa flight left for Frankfurt from South Africa Monday evening. But as a new ash cloud moved over British airspace Tuesday, SAA delayed and then cancelled the flights.

              “I’ve checked out of my hotel, and now the flight is cancelled,” complained a visibly angry woman from Winchester, England, who asked not to be named. “I tried calling the hotel again to make a booking, but they said it’s full. I don’t know where I’m going to sleep,” she told AFP. The airline has said it is paying for one night’s hotel stay for stranded passengers. But Michelle Fiasse, a Belgian stuck in Johannesburg with three children, said that wasn’t enough to keep the family from straining its budget.

              “SAA paid for the first night, but we had to pay for the other four days. It’s frustrating and expensive. If the plane doesn’t go tonight, I will have to call my friend in Johannesburg to accommodate my family,” Fiasse told AFP. Andy Horn, a passenger from Britain, said his travel insurance was paying for his hotel room, but that he worried about his son at home. “My 18-year-old boy (is) by himself and running out of money and food. We live by the countryside and he can’t drive, so that’s my worry,” Horn told AFP.

              SAA head of operations Tebogo Tsimane said it would have been dangerous to fly Tuesday, and that they were waiting for an update from the British authorities before informing passengers on the way forward. Airports Company South Africa estimates more than 20,000 passengers have had flights from South Africa to northern and central Europe cancelled because of the ash cloud. SAA also cancelled flights to and from Frankfurt and Munich on Tuesday.

              Johannesburg, April 20, 2010 (AFP)

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              The domestic investment arm of China’s sovereign wealth fund has been given the green light to raise 80 billion yuan (11.7 billion dollars) through a bond issue, state media reported Wednesday.

              Central Huijin Investment Ltd will inject the proceeds into state-run commercial banks to help shore up their capital base after massive lending last year, the China Daily said. The rest of the funds will be pumped into the Export-Import Bank of China and the Credit Insurance Group, which are tasked with supporting the country’s export sector, the newspaper said, citing unnamed sources.

              Huijin is an investment arm of China Investment Corp, the country’s 300-million-dollar sovereign wealth fund, and was set up to invest in key state-owned financial institutions. Officials at Huijin were not immediately available to comment while CIC declined to respond when contacted by AFP.

              The report did not give a date for the bond issue approved by the State Council, or cabinet, or how the proceeds would be carved up. Chinese lenders have been ordered to increase their capital base after new loans nearly doubled to 9.6 trillion yuan in 2009 as they heeded Beijing’s calls to help stimulate the economy amid the global financial crisis.

              Many of the big state-owned lenders, including Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and Bank of China have announced plans to raise billions of dollars through sales of convertible bonds or new shares.

              Beijing, April 21, 2010 (AFP)