The U.S. administration explored a plan to condition the provision of U.S. Navy escorts through the Strait of Hormuz on vessels securing insurance from a U.S. government program.
Earlier, President Donald Trump had indicated that the U.S. would provide insurance for commercial shipping transits through the strategically important waterway, as threats to navigation by Iranian actions sent oil prices higher.
Earlier this month, the Development Finance Corporation (DFC) announced a reinsurance initiative intended to bolster commercial transits. The DFC's plan would make up to $20 billion of reinsurance available to support ships that would travel through the strait with naval escorts.
Subsequently, officials considered coupling that reinsurance program with a requirement: vessels requesting a military escort would need to buy insurance under the DFC-backed arrangement administered in partnership with a private insurer, Chubb. The proposal under discussion would make the government-backed coverage the mandatory insurer of hull, machinery and cargo for ships seeking a Navy escort.
It remains uncertain whether the administration will adopt the compulsory element of the proposal. Discussions described the model as one in which military protection and government-backed insurance would be combined - but no decision on making purchase of that coverage obligatory has been confirmed.
Under the framework that was being considered, the insurance portfolio required for escorted transits would explicitly include protections for hull, machinery and cargo. Market contacts directly involved with the DFC were reported to have been aware of the designs under consideration.
Context summary - U.S. officials explored linking naval protection through the Strait of Hormuz to purchase of government-backed insurance. The DFC offered up to $20 billion in reinsurance to support escorted transits, and a private insurer was identified as a program partner. Whether the purchase of that insurance would become mandatory for ships seeking escorts remains unresolved.