Does your insurance cover storm damage to irrigation systems?

Is your farm covered if irrigation systems fail or can’t be timely replaced?

damaged Irrigation pivot in a field
Damaged irrigation pivot. Photo by Lyndon Kelly, Michigan State University Extension

Recent storm events are a reminder of how much damage can happen to irrigation equipment. For most irrigators, purchasing insurance is a way to avoid financial disaster.

Many high-value specialty crop contracts require equipment to be insured, and sometimes total replacement value is required. Specialty crops can run into values exceeding $1 million per 100-acre field. Companies requiring insurance hope an all-new pivot can be put up quicker if insurance is paying for it, which salvages the crops for the year and replaces the damaged equipment.

A sign in a local insurance company says, “You must own it to insure it,” which is a reminder that the owner of the equipment is the person who needs to acquire the insurance. This issue came to light when recent storm events significantly damaged irrigation equipment. In at least one field where the center pivot was destroyed, the pivot was found to have no insurance from either the lessee or the landowner. Another term for no insurance is self-insured, meaning that the total cost for the replacement would be absorbed by the irrigation owner. In the previous field example, if the irrigation equipment was owned by the lessee, they would be responsible for the purchase of insurance or paying to replace the irrigation system.

Insurance companies will require listing the components the coverage is issued against and an estimated value. Irrigators need to remember that electronic items and wells have a high likelihood of damage. Variable frequency drive control boxes, wells and their motors, which are all items that have high potential for lightning damage.

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Make sure you and those you work with have a good understanding of whose insurance coverage will be used if problems arise.

Insurance for irrigation equipment can be purchased as part of a farm owner’s policy by listing the center pivot, wells, pumps and controls as farm equipment. Irrigation-specific insurance is often sold through equipment leasing agencies and irrigation equipment suppliers. These irrigation-specific insurance policies are often used with leased equipment or as part of a package deal with the purchase of a complete system under an equipment loan. Producers need to make sure when using irrigation-specific insurance policies that they are not double insuring any individual piece of equipment. Likewise make sure pumps, generators, disconnect panel or other equipment are covered even if they are not part of the system lease.

Key questions to identify if equipment insurance coverage meets farm needs

  • Is an irrigation system held by individuals or the business itself? Whomever owns the system gets the check.
  • Does the policy have a current equipment list, or does it need updating? Outdated equipment lists could mean replacement systems are only partially covered or not at all.
  • Does coverage offer repair, full replacement or lowest cost options? If supplies are tight, the answer may limit how quickly irrigation systems can be up and running in a field.
  • Is there any debt against equipment that affects coverage? Lenders often work with producers to replace damaged equipment. Just make sure they know what’s going on with insurance payments.
  • If equipment is covered by both liability and equipment policies, can one be reduced without increasing risk?
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Make sure you know your insurance covers certain practices or consider your self-insured. At one time, moving pivots down the road were common. However, it has become a rare occurrence given increased awareness of insurance liability.

Avoid the confusion between liability coverage and equipment insurance. The operator of the equipment should have liability coverage for the equipment he runs and maintains. Liability insurance protects against risks of liabilities imposed by lawsuits and similar claims involving the irrigation system. Irrigation equipment depends on automated controls, often runs on high voltage electricity and has no operator present most of the time they are running. All these factors have an inherent risk involved.

Key questions to identify if liability insurance coverage meets farm needs

  • What is at risk besides damaged equipment and can the farm withstand those losses without coverage? Coverage should meet farm needs and adversity towards risk.
  • Are certain farm practices covered under the policy? Certain activities may limit or disqualify a farm from liability protection.
  • Is there any debt against equipment that affects coverage? Lenders may have similar conditions for how both liability and equipment insurance payments are handled. If there’s debt on the irrigation system, always keep lenders up to date on repairs or replacement progress.

Another consideration should be what happens to yield losses if an irrigation system fails. Equipment insurance usually only covers irrigation systems and their components. If there is a yield loss, producers will need to rely on crop insurance to make up any differences.

Key questions to identify if crop insurance coverage meets farm needs

  • How do insurance units affect potential yield losses? The likelihood of payments can change between units: enterprise (whole crop), basic (share of production) or optional (individual sections).
  • What practice type (i.e., irrigated, non-irrigated) are farm acres covered under? Less than normal water applications on irrigated acres could lead to yields that trigger a loss payment.
  • Is the farm’s insurance company aware of irrigation damage and the potential of resulting yield losses? Failure of irrigation water supply is a covered loss for many insurance policies. Letting agents know of irrigation failure can help with insurance claim processing if there is a loss.

Producers should meet with their respective insurance agents to review policy coverage. Make sure everything an agent says is fully understood by all farm managers. Be sure to ask questions related to risk scenarios and how coverage would work.

Special thanks to William Hendrian, MSU Extension District 8 Director, for input on liability insurance considerations.

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