Terrorism Risk Insurance Act

The Terrorism Risk Insurance Act (TRIA) is a United States federal law signed into law by President George W. Bush on November 26, 2002. The Act created a federal "backstop" for insurance claims related to acts of terrorism. The Act is intended as a temporary measure to allow time for the insurance industry to develop their own solutions and products to insure against acts of terrorism. The Act was set to expire December 31, 2005, but was extended for another two years in legislation in December 2005, making the new expiry date December 31, 2007.

On December 26, 2007, the Act was again extended under the Terrorism Risk Insurance Program Reauthorization Act, which extends the Terrorism Risk Insurance Act through Dec. 31, 2014.

Contents

Function

TRIA created a U.S. government reinsurance facility to provide reinsurance coverage to insurance companies following a declared terrorism event. TRIA is a short-term measure designed to help the insurance market recover from 9/11 and develop solutions to insuring terrorism.

TRIA established the Federal Terrorism Insurance Program to administer a system of shared public/private compensation for insured losses resulting from acts of terrorism in order to protect consumers and create transitional period for private insurance markets to stabilize

Governance

The Secretary of the Treasury oversees the Terrorism Insurance Program. The Secretary has authority to establish regulations and procedures to implement program.

Definition of terrorism

The term “act of terrorism” is defined in the act as: any act certified by the Secretary of Treasury, in concurrence with the Secretary of State and Attorney General, to be an act that is dangerous to human life, property, or infrastructure and to have resulted in damage within the U.S. (or outside the U.S. in the case of a U.S.-flagged vessel), or on the premises of a U.S. mission.

In the 2002 version, the act of terrorism was defined to have been committed by individual(s) acting on behalf of a foreign person or foreign interest as part of an effort to coerce the U.S. population or government. In the 2007 reauthorization the definition was broadened to include acts by persons with no foreign affiliation.[1]

Losses from the act must exceed $50 million in 2006 – up from the original $5 million trigger. In 2007, that trigger rose to $100 million.

Structure of assistance

-Is a recipient of direct earned premiums for any type of commercial property and casualty insurance coverage;
-Is licensed (or admitted) to provide insurance in any State, approved for the purpose of offering property and casualty insurance by a Federal agency in connection with maritime, energy, or aviation activity, or is a State residual market insurance entity or State workers’ compensation fund
-And meets any other criteria that the Secretary may reasonably prescribe.

References

  1. ^ Insurance Information Institute. (2008). Terrorism Risk and Insurance.

External links