Knowledge Base

The Claw — Insurance & Liability Deep Dive

Draft High Research 2,785 words Created Mar 5, 2026

The Claw -- Insurance & Liability Deep Dive

Who insures a first-of-kind plasma processing vessel operating 1,000 nm from shore in international waters? What does it cost? What's uninsurable?

This document expands on the brief insurance section in the Regulatory & Legal Framework (node 20, section 9) and feeds into the Risk Register (risk R3).


1. Coverage Types Required

The Claw needs six distinct insurance policies. No single insurer or P&I club covers all of them.

1.1 Hull & Machinery (H&M)

What it covers: Physical damage to the vessel hull, engines, navigation equipment, and permanently installed machinery. Includes total loss, constructive total loss, collision damage, grounding, fire, and explosion.

Key considerations for The Claw:

  • The plasma processing equipment (PRRS reactor, ORC system, syngas engine, pre-processing line) must be scheduled as "machinery" -- not all H&M policies automatically cover non-propulsion equipment
  • Conversion from tanker to processing vessel changes the risk profile -- insurer must be involved during conversion design, not after
  • Vessel value is not the hull acquisition cost ($15-25M) but the total insured value including conversion ($200-250M+ for Phase 1)
Estimated cost:
  • Standard H&M rate: 0.15-0.50% of insured value/year
  • First-of-kind premium: 2-5x standard rates (per regulatory research)
  • At $200M insured value: $600K-5M/year (wide range reflects novel vessel uncertainty)
  • Expected to normalize toward $400K-1M/year after 3-5 years of claims-free operation
Market: London market (Lloyd's syndicates), Norwegian Hull Club, Gard, Allianz Commercial, AIG Marine.


1.2 Protection & Indemnity (P&I)

What it covers: Third-party liabilities -- crew injury/death, cargo damage, collision liability (third-party portion), pollution cleanup costs, wreck removal, and fines.

Key considerations:

  • P&I clubs are mutual associations (not traditional insurers) -- the vessel must be "entered" into a club
  • Clubs in the International Group pool risks above $10M per claim, with reinsurance up to $3.1B
  • Novel vessel types may be declined by conservative clubs -- approach specialist clubs first
  • Crew operating plasma equipment at sea is a novel injury risk category -- clubs will want to understand training programs, safety protocols, and emergency procedures
  • Environmental pollution liability is included but limited -- separate environmental liability policy may be needed
Estimated cost:
  • P&I club entry cost is "call-based" (contribution set by committee, not fixed premium)
  • For a vessel of this type/size: $200K-600K/year estimated
  • First entry may require higher "advance call" until claims history develops
Target clubs:
  • Gard (Norway) -- largest P&I club, experienced with offshore and novel operations
  • Standard Club -- specialist in offshore and novel vessel types
  • Shipowners' Club -- covers smaller/specialist fleets, more flexible with novel operations
  • UK P&I Club -- strong in environmental liability
  • Alternatively: non-IG specialist insurer if clubs decline

1.3 Environmental Liability (Separate Policy)

What it covers: Pollution events beyond P&I limits, environmental remediation costs, regulatory fines, and third-party environmental claims.

Why separate from P&I:

  • P&I pollution coverage is designed for oil spills and bunker fuel events (CLC/Bunkers Convention framework)
  • The Claw's environmental risks are different: potential syngas release, slag spill, process water contamination, or equipment-related chemical release
  • P&I clubs may exclude or sub-limit coverage for processing-related pollution
  • A standalone environmental liability policy provides purpose-built coverage
Key considerations:
  • Zero marine discharge design dramatically reduces this risk -- if no processed material is discharged, the environmental exposure is limited to vessel operational pollution (bunker fuel, hydraulic fluid) which is standard maritime risk
  • Plasma equipment failure modes (reactor breach, syngas leak) are industrial risks with established insurance coverage on land -- the novelty is the marine context
Estimated cost: $100K-400K/year depending on scope. Specialist market: AIG Environmental, Allianz, Zurich, or Lloyd's syndicates specializing in environmental risk.


1.4 Loss of Hire / Business Interruption

What it covers: Revenue loss during vessel downtime caused by insured events (damage, breakdown, drydock following accident). Pays a daily rate for each day the vessel cannot operate.

Key considerations:

  • Phase 1 revenue is primarily funded by grants and sponsorship, not daily operations revenue -- loss of hire calculation is different from a commercial vessel
  • More relevant in Phase 2+ when plastic credit revenue is flowing
  • Agreed daily rate must reflect actual daily operating costs + lost credit revenue
  • Deductible period (waiting period before payments start): typically 14-30 days
Estimated cost: $50K-200K/year depending on daily rate and deductible. Standard marine market.


1.5 Construction / Conversion All Risks (CAR)

What it covers: Physical damage during the shipyard conversion period -- fire, collapse, flood, theft, faulty workmanship, design defect. One-time policy for the 18-30 month conversion.

Key considerations:

  • Conversion all risks policies are standard for FPSO conversions -- well-established market
  • Coverage should include delay in start-up (DSU) extension for cost overruns caused by insured events
  • Third-party liability during construction (shipyard workers, visitors, neighboring vessels)
  • Must cover testing and commissioning phase (when plasma equipment is first operated)
Estimated cost: 0.3-0.8% of total conversion cost. At $150M conversion: $450K-1.2M (one-time premium, not annual).

Market: Standard construction/marine market. Lloyd's syndicates, Allianz, Swiss Re, Munich Re.


1.6 Directors & Officers (D&O) Liability

What it covers: Claims against foundation/company directors for wrongful acts, mismanagement, regulatory failures, or environmental damage attributed to governance decisions.

Key considerations:

  • Essential for attracting qualified board members (no one joins a board without D&O coverage)
  • Environmental D&O exposure: if the vessel causes environmental damage, directors could face personal liability claims
  • Novel venture = higher D&O premium (limited claims precedent for underwriting)
Estimated cost: $20K-80K/year depending on coverage limits and entity jurisdiction.


2. Total Annual Insurance Cost Estimate

Phase 1 Operations (Annual)

CoverageLow EstimateHigh EstimateMid-Range
Hull & Machinery$600K$5.0M$1.5M
P&I$200K$600K$400K
Environmental Liability$100K$400K$200K
Loss of Hire$50K$200K$100K
D&O$20K$80K$50K
Annual Total$970K$6.28M$2.25M
Plus one-time: Construction All Risks: $450K-1.2M

Context

  • OPEX model budgets 8-15% for insurance ($710K-2.75M at $8.9-18.3M OPEX range)
  • Mid-range estimate ($2.25M) falls within the upper portion of this range
  • First-of-kind premium is the main driver -- expect costs to decrease 30-50% after 3-5 years of clean operations

3. What's Uninsurable (or Near-Uninsurable)

3.1 Technology Performance Risk

What: The PRRS reactor doesn't work as well as projected -- lower throughput, higher energy consumption, more downtime. The vessel operates but underperforms.

Why uninsurable: This is business performance risk, not an insurable event. No insurer covers "the technology didn't live up to expectations." This is why the PoC exists -- to validate performance before committing $200M.

Mitigation (non-insurance): PoC validation, conservative performance projections, contractual performance guarantees from PyroGenesis (if available).


3.2 Revenue / Market Risk

What: Plastic credit prices don't reach projected levels, or the market contracts.

Why uninsurable: Market risk is a business risk. You can't insure commodity price floors.

Mitigation (non-insurance): Revenue diversification (credits + sponsorship + grants + methanol), forward contracts with credit buyers, acceptance that Phase 1 is subsidy-dependent.


3.3 Regulatory Prohibition

What: A regulatory body (IMO, flag state) orders the vessel to cease operations after deployment.

Why difficult to insure: Political risk insurance exists (MIGA, Lloyd's) but typically covers expropriation in sovereign territories, not international waters regulatory actions. A novel prohibition with no precedent is hard to underwrite.

Mitigation (non-insurance): Legal opinion before vessel commitment, flag state engagement, classification society AiP, zero-discharge design, London Protocol positioning. If the legal groundwork is done during PoC/Build, the probability of post-deployment prohibition is very low.

Partial insurance: "Frustration" or "change of law" coverage may be available as an extension to marine policy -- covers losses if government action prevents vessel operation. Expensive and limited.


3.4 Reputational Damage

What: A bycatch incident, environmental group campaign, or negative media cycle damages the project's reputation and fundraising ability.

Why uninsurable: Reputation is not an insurable interest in marine insurance.

Mitigation (non-insurance): Proactive environmental monitoring and transparency, academic partnerships for credibility, crisis communications plan, independent environmental observers on board.


3.5 PyroGenesis Bankruptcy (Vendor Failure)

What: PyroGenesis fails before delivering equipment or during warranty period, leaving The Claw without technical support.

Why difficult to insure: Vendor credit risk insurance exists but is expensive and typically covers only financial losses from non-delivery, not technology replacement costs.

Mitigation (non-insurance): Technology license with full documentation transfer, stockpile of critical spares, relationships with key engineers, alternative plasma torch sourcing.


4. The Insurance Engagement Strategy

Phase 1: Early Engagement (During PoC, Month 0-12)

Do not wait until the vessel is designed to talk to insurers. Early engagement achieves three things: 1. Insurers provide feedback on design features that reduce premium (e.g., fire suppression systems, redundant safety controls) 2. Preliminary indication of premium range helps with financial modeling 3. Demonstrates to other funders (investors, grant providers) that the project is insurable

Actions:

  • Appoint a marine insurance broker with offshore/novel vessel experience
- Recommended: Marsh Marine, Gallagher Offshore, Willis Towers Watson Marine - The broker is the interface to all markets -- do not approach insurers directly
  • Provide broker with concept design, risk assessment, and PoC plan
  • Request indicative terms from 2-3 H&M markets and 2-3 P&I clubs
  • Incorporate insurer feedback into FEED design

Phase 2: Formal Placement (During Build, Month 12-30)

Once classification AiP is obtained:

  • Formal broker submission to market with AiP, FEED design, safety management system, and crew training plan
  • Construction All Risks placed before drydock entry
  • H&M and P&I placed before sea trials
  • Environmental liability placed before first operational campaign

Phase 3: Renewal and Optimization (Ops, Year 1+)

  • Claims-free operation reduces premiums at each annual renewal
  • Operational data (safety record, environmental monitoring results) strengthens negotiating position
  • After 3-5 years, approach additional markets for competitive quotes
  • Consider captive insurance or self-insurance for predictable, lower-severity risks (equipment breakdown, minor damage)

5. Liability Framework: Who's Liable for What?

International Waters -- The Legal Vacuum

No comprehensive liability regime exists for non-oil/gas installations on the high seas. The CLC (Civil Liability Convention) and IOPC Fund only apply to oil tankers. The Claw's liability is governed by:

1. Flag state law -- Marshall Islands Maritime Act (if RMI-flagged) 2. General maritime law -- customary international law of the sea 3. Contract -- charter parties, service agreements, credit sales contracts 4. Tort -- if a third party suffers damage from The Claw's operations

Specific Liability Scenarios

ScenarioWho's LiableInsurance Coverage
Crew member injured by plasma equipmentVessel operator (flag state labor law)P&I
Collision with another vesselBoth vessels (proportional fault)H&M (own damage) + P&I (third-party)
Oil/fuel spill from vesselVessel owner (Bunkers Convention)P&I
Process water discharge causes marine damageVessel operator (flag state environmental law)Environmental Liability
Slag spill into oceanVessel operatorEnvironmental Liability
Syngas explosion injuring crewVessel operatorP&I (crew injury) + H&M (vessel damage)
Bycatch of protected speciesVessel operator (CITES, flag state)P&I (fines)
Vessel sinks/abandonedVessel owner (Nairobi Convention)P&I (wreck removal)
Third party claims (NGO lawsuit)Vessel operatorP&I + D&O

The Zero-Discharge Design as Liability Shield

The single most important insurance decision in The Claw's design: zero marine discharge.

If all byproducts (slag, process water, scrubbing residue) are stored on board and offloaded in port:

  • London Protocol dumping liability: eliminated
  • Environmental pollution from processing: limited to equipment failure (containable)
  • Flag state environmental compliance: dramatically simplified
  • Insurance premium: significantly reduced (the discharge question is the #1 underwriting concern)
This design choice costs operational convenience (slag storage uses cargo space, port offload adds logistics) but saves millions in insurance premiums and eliminates the largest liability exposure.


6. Nairobi Convention: Wreck Removal Obligation

Under the Nairobi International Convention on the Removal of Wrecks (2007), the registered owner of a vessel must: 1. Maintain insurance covering wreck removal costs 2. Carry a certificate proving such insurance

For The Claw:

  • If the vessel sinks in the GPGP (4,500m+ depth), wreck removal from the deep ocean floor is impractical
  • However, the convention requires insurance regardless of practical recoverability
  • Estimated wreck removal insurance: covered within P&I entry (standard)
  • Environmental hazard from sunken vessel: bunker fuel, hydraulic fluid, slag storage -- must be assessed and insured

7. Key Insurer/Broker Contacts (by Category)

Marine Insurance Brokers (appoint one)

BrokerSpecialtyNotes
Marsh MarineGlobal leader, offshore specialistHandles most FPSO placements
Willis Towers Watson MarineStrong Lloyd's relationshipsPublished 2026 marine hull outlook
Gallagher OffshoreOffshore energy specialistExperienced with novel offshore units
Aon MarineFull-service marineStrong analytics capability

Hull & Machinery Markets

InsurerNotes
Norwegian Hull Club10,000+ vessels, Claims Lead on 6,000+. Experienced with novel operations
GardNorway-based, largest P&I + H&M combined capability
Allianz Commercial (Marine)Global capacity, offshore experience
Lloyd's Syndicates (multiple)Specialist marine property syndicates. Key syndicates: Atrium (marine property), Brit, Hiscox
AIG MarineLarge capacity, US-headquartered

P&I Clubs

ClubNotes
GardLargest by premium. Norway-based. Offshore experience
Standard ClubSpecialist in offshore and novel vessel types
Shipowners' ClubFlexible with smaller/specialist fleets
UK P&IStrong environmental liability coverage
BritanniaWell-regarded, part of IG

Environmental Liability

InsurerNotes
AIG EnvironmentalStandalone pollution policies
AllianzEnvironmental impairment liability
ZurichEnvironmental risk solutions
Lloyd's specialist syndicatesBespoke environmental coverage

8. Insurance Implications for Financial Modeling

What Funders Will Ask

1. "Is it insurable?" -- Yes, with early broker engagement and classification society AiP. The vessel is unusual but not uninsurable. FPSO conversions with novel processing equipment are insured routinely.

2. "What's the annual insurance cost?" -- Mid-range estimate $2.25M/year. Budget range $1-6M/year. First-of-kind premium is significant but declines with operational history.

3. "What are the uninsurable risks?" -- Technology performance, revenue/market risk, regulatory prohibition, reputation. These are managed through PoC validation, revenue diversification, legal groundwork, and transparency -- not insurance.

4. "What if there's a major claim?" -- P&I pooling through the International Group provides $3.1B of shared capacity. A single catastrophic event (sinking, major pollution) is covered. The Claw doesn't need to carry the full risk alone.

OPEX Model Insurance Line Item

ScenarioAnnual Cost% of OPEX ($14M mid)
Optimistic (after 3-5 years)$1.0M7%
Mid-range (first 2 years)$2.25M16%
Conservative (worst case, year 1)$4.0M+29%
Recommendation: Budget $2.5M/year for insurance in Phase 1 financial model, with note that this decreases to ~$1.5M by Year 3 assuming clean operations.


Summary

1. The Claw is insurable -- novel, but within the range of offshore risks that the marine insurance market handles 2. Total annual cost: ~$2.25M (mid-range, Year 1). Decreases with operational track record 3. Zero-discharge design is the insurance keystone -- eliminates the largest liability and premium driver 4. Engage broker during PoC -- not after vessel design. Early engagement reduces premium and improves design 5. Uninsurable risks (technology performance, market, regulation, reputation) are managed operationally, not through insurance 6. Classification society AiP unlocks insurability -- without AiP, placement is extremely difficult; with AiP, it's a specialist but manageable placement


Research compiled March 2026. Based on International Group of P&I Clubs reinsurance structure, Norwegian Hull Club and Gard public materials, WTW Insurance Marketplace Realities 2026, Beris International FPSO insurance guide, Lloyd's market structure, and The Claw regulatory research (node 20).

Sources consulted:

  • International Group of P&I Clubs reinsurance 2025-2026 renewal
  • Norwegian Hull Club (Wikipedia, nhc.no)
  • WTW Insurance Marketplace Realities 2026 -- Marine Hull & Liability
  • Beris International FPSO Insurance guide (berisintl.com)
  • Risk Strategies 2025 Marine Insurance Outlook
  • AIG Marine environmental liability products
  • The Claw Regulatory & Legal Framework (node 20, section 9)