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New Crane Cover Highlights the Insurance Gap for High-Risk Trades

Why specialist operators may need more than standard business packages

New Crane Cover Highlights the Insurance Gap for High-Risk Trades?w=400

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A new specialist insurance product for Australian crane and rigging operators is a timely reminder that not every business fits neatly into a standard policy box.
ARTes Specialty, working with wholesale provider Mobius Insurance, has launched an integrated crane and rigging policy for the local market, adding to its earlier Australian offerings for commercial loggers and contractors’ plant and equipment.

The new product is aimed at operators whose risks often span several insurance categories at once: expensive mobile plant, transport exposures, rigging liability, property damage, downtime and contractual obligations on complex worksites. The policy reportedly combines material damage, business interruption, riggers’ liability and transport-related exposures under one wording, with significant liability limits and claims managed in Australia.

For small and medium business owners in hazardous trades, the bigger story is not just the arrival of another policy. It is the growing recognition that fragmented insurance arrangements can become a problem at claim time. A crane contractor, forestry operator or mobile plant business may have separate cover for equipment, public liability, transit, hired-in plant and interruption losses. If an incident cuts across several of those areas, the business may face delays while insurers work out which policy should respond.

This is particularly important in sectors already carrying elevated safety and financial risk. Recent Safe Work Australia figures show machinery operators and drivers continue to record one of the highest workplace fatality rates in the country, while transport, agriculture, forestry and construction remain heavily represented in serious workplace incidents. Construction businesses are also under sustained financial pressure, with ASIC data showing the sector has accounted for a large share of company insolvencies in recent years.

For operators, the practical takeaway is to review whether their current business insurance options reflect how the business actually works, not just how a proposal form categorises it. Key questions include:

  • Does the policy cover owned, hired and transported plant in the way the business uses it?
  • Are liability limits suitable for the contracts being accepted?
  • Is business interruption cover triggered by damage to essential machinery or equipment?
  • Are exclusions, subcontractor conditions and maintenance requirements understood before work starts?

High-risk trades should also be cautious about choosing cover on price alone. Cheaper premiums may look attractive in a tight market, but a narrow wording can leave costly gaps when a machine is damaged, a job is delayed or a third party alleges loss. A broker can help compare wording, limits and claims support across insurers.

The launch also signals a broader shift in commercial insurance: niche sectors are attracting more tailored underwriting capacity. For Australian trades businesses, that could mean better-fitting cover, but only if owners take the time to test whether their insurance keeps pace with the real risks on site.

Published:Wednesday, 24th Jun 2026
Author: Paige Estritori

Please Note: We do not endorse any specific products or companies. Some content is sourced from third parties, including press releases, and may not be independently verified for accuracy or completeness.

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Underwriting:
The process by which an insurer determines the risk of insuring a client and decides the terms of coverage.