News

Lenders’ Insurance: New Tools for Banks and Borrowers

When it was introduced two decades ago, environmental insurance was used primarily as a risk management tool for businesses whose operations made them particularly vulnerable to environmental exposures, such as companies in the chemical and petroleum industries. More recently, environmental insurance is purchased by both current and former property owners to address transactional as well as operational needs, playing an integral role in mergers and acquisitions, property transfers, and settlement of historic liabilities. Now, a third trend is expanding the scope of environmental protection even further to protect another party wrestling with potential environmental liabilities - financial institutions.

By Helen Eichmann, product line manager for Chubb Environmental Sol | July 31, 2002

4 min read

Beyond Pleading

In the assessment of its duty to defend, an insurer is entitled to go beyond the pleadings rule. Recent decisions from the Supreme Court of Canada have shed new light on the thorny question of when an insurer's duty to defend is triggered.

By Ani Abdalyan | July 31, 2002

6 min read

Protecting Value: An Enterprise-Wide Approach

In today's climate of limited cover availability, increased costs and greater consequences on business returns, financial executives and risk managers must now find new solutions to help minimize their companies' risk exposure. This is especially true in light of new research, which has found that contingency planning - once the realm of risk managers - has now reached the highest levels of the corporate boardroom.

By Perry Brazeau, senior vice president of FM Global's Canadian div | July 31, 2002

5 min read

IMCA/LCA Annual Meeting 2002: Strong Words

With turmoil driving the insurance industry following the September 11 terrorist attacks, coupled with crippling financial results across both the Canadian and U.S. markets, the industry's marketing and communication professionals recently gathered in Toronto for a conference jointly sponsored by the Insurance Marketing Communications Association (IMCA) and Life Communicators Association (LCA). The conference honed in on the changing marketplace and how insurers are adapting to "talk the talk".

July 31, 2002

3 min read