The COVID-19 Pandemic and Insurance Coverage for Business Interruption in Canada
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Authors
Knutsen, Erik S.
Date
2021
Type
journal article
Language
en
Keyword
Alternative Title
Abstract
This article explores the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the insurance industry and analyzes whether most Canadian businesses are insured for business interruptions and losses caused by the pandemic. The author suggests that pandemic-related losses are insurable. Insurers have had sufficient time and experience to prepare and model their policies to account for events such as the COVID-19 pandemic. Insurance policies typically protect against risks which are triggered only where a business suffers “direct physical loss of, or damage to” property. Ultimately, whether Canadian businesses are insured against COVID-19 business interruptions will depend on how the courts interpret “direct physical loss of, or damage to, property” in the context of pandemic-related losses. The author cautions against engaging in a literalist or dictionary-focused interpretation of insurance policies. Instead, the author argues that equitable and predictable insurance coverage determinations requires a contextual assessment grounded in the role of insurance as a risk-based financial instrument.
Description
Citation
Knutsen, Erik S., "The COVID-19 Pandemic and Insurance Coverage for Business Interruption in Canada" (2021). 46 Queen's Law Journal 2.
Publisher
Queen's University Faculty of Law
License
Journal
Volume
Issue
URI for this record
PubMed ID
External DOI
ISSN
0316-778X
