Elon Musk’s record‑breaking SpaceX IPO has thrust the space economy into the financial mainstream, yet mainland China’s trillion‑yuan commercial space sector remains strikingly underinsured – a gap industry insiders say creates a rare opening for Hong Kong.
In China, only third‑party liability insurance is compulsory for commercial space activities. Coverage for research and development, manufacturing, testing, launches and in‑orbit operations remains largely optional, according to Li Zhizhong, an academician at the International Academy of Astronautics.
Failures, however, can carry enormous financial consequences.
In 2023, the global space insurance sector paid out roughly US$1 billion in claims from unexpected failures, while annual premiums collected were only about US$550 million, according to industry publication DatacenterDynamics. The disparity has kept premiums at prohibitively high levels.
Standard satellite launch insurance premiums typically sit around 15 % of a mission’s value, while coverage for the first three launches of a new rocket climbs to 18‑20 %, Li estimated.
Also Read
- Heatwave engulfs eastern Europe; France registers 1,000 deaths in a week
- HKU’s Undergrad Student Publication Ceases Operations After 74-Year Run Due to Recruitment Challenges]
- Biden Calls Trump a ‘Loser’ Over Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool Controversy
- Germany records 41.7°C, a new national heat high


