Power Market Review 2024
Off the back of a further 12 months of relatively low loss activity, sustained insurer growth targets and increasing market capacity, liability conditions are favorable for sought-after business. But the reality is multi-faceted, and the ultimate focus remains on rate adequacy rather than change.
Key takeaways:
The international liability market in London continues to be favorable for buyers, with a small uptick in capacity and a continuation of softening market conditions, leading to greater competition and downward pressure on rates.
Earlier in 2025, Lloyd’s of London announced a third consecutive year of underwriting profit for casualty as a class of business . The results point to a sustained period of profitability, underpinned by a buoyant underwriting environment, benign loss activity and additional market capacity, which has led to further softening of the market.
While on the surface, the international liability market appears to be signaling a positive trajectory, the outlook for the power sector is more nuanced. This is best viewed through three lenses:
Against the backdrop of complex and interconnected risk factors, two key evolving exposures are impacting the international liability market for power:
Changing climatic conditions:
Underwriters are paying increasing attention to the uncertainty and increased frequency of extreme weather events:
In the pursuit of decarbonization and net zero goals, many countries are pushing their national grids to work in ways that they were not designed to operate, and which are outside the stable inertia limits. This could result in increased frequency fluctuations, heightening the risk of grid instability and the subsequent possibility of a rise in liability claims, particularly when considering pure financial loss and failure to supply exposures.
The international liability market for the power sector has showed signs of softening, but the majority of movement relates to price rather than coverage, with underwriters holding firm on core areas of policy wordings.
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS): Exclusions in reinsurance treaties, and subsequently some market standard wordings, has led to a widespread and consistent application of PFAS exclusions typically being applied by default.
Climate change: The application of a climate change exclusion, often although not exclusively on the market standard LMA5570 form, is becoming increasingly prevalent.
Pure financial loss and failure to supply: The ability to obtain pure financial loss cover resulting from failure to supply remains under more underwriting scrutiny. This includes details around third-party contractual exposures and supply agreements and can attract significant additional premium.
As new capacity continues to enter the market, particularly for generation risks, increased competition and further softening of market conditions is expected. Rates for T&D and coal-exposed risks are likely to stay steadier.
For risks with adequate pricing and clean loss histories, some markets may consider increasing line sizes and/or offering long-term agreements which typically incorporate a small rate reduction in the second year.
The market may see a rise in captive deployment for risks that are heavily exposed to coal as buyers seek to avoid opportunistic capacity and reduce potential fluctuation in capacity demonstrated in recent years.
Headline trends are generally positive, particularly for power generation, but the undercurrent of continued social inflation, concerns around loss reserving and prior year loss deterioration continue to remain a balancing factor for the international liability market.
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WTW hopes you found the general information provided here informative and helpful. The information contained herein is not intended to constitute legal or other professional advice and should not be relied upon in lieu of consultation with your own legal advisors. In the event you would like more information regarding your insurance coverage, please do not hesitate to reach out to us. In North America, WTW offers insurance products through licensed entities, including Willis Towers Watson Northeast, Inc. (in the United States) and Willis Canada Inc. (in Canada).
| Title | File Type | File Size |
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| Beneath the surface: Underwriting undercurrents in a softening power liability market | 1.9 MB |