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The final insurance frontier: Hong Kong spots opportunity in mainland China’s space boom

Like maritime trade centuries ago, the space economy is built on high-risk, high-value journeys. Hong Kong wants to be its insurance hub

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The rapid expansion of China's commercial space industry is creating growing demand for specialised insurance products covering launches, satellites and other space-related risks, industry participants say. Photo: Weibo
Coco Fengin GuangdongandMinxiao Changin Shenzhen

Elon Musk’s recent record-breaking SpaceX IPO has thrust the space economy into the financial mainstream, but mainland China’s trillion-yuan commercial space sector remains strikingly underinsured – a gap industry insiders say presents a rare opportunity for Hong Kong.

On the mainland, only third-party liability insurance is mandatory for commercial space activities. Coverage for research and development, manufacturing, testing, launches and in-orbit operations remained largely optional, according to Li Zhizhong, an academician at the International Academy of Astronautics.

Yet failures can carry enormous financial consequences.

In 2023, the global space insurance industry paid out about US$1 billion in claims from unexpected failures, despite collecting only around US$550 million in annual premiums, according to industry publication DatacenterDynamics. Those losses have kept premiums prohibitively high.

GalaxySpace’s Lingxi-03 communications satellite launches from Taiyuan in Shanxi province. As China’s commercial space ambitions grow, industry leaders say insurance has become a critical missing piece. Photo: Weibo
GalaxySpace’s Lingxi-03 communications satellite launches from Taiyuan in Shanxi province. As China’s commercial space ambitions grow, industry leaders say insurance has become a critical missing piece. Photo: Weibo

“Standard satellite launch insurance premiums typically hover around 15 per cent of a mission’s value, while coverage for the first three launches of any newly developed rocket rises to between 18 and 20 per cent,” Li estimated.

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