No. GRA does not certify insurability.
GRA does not issue insurability certificates, insurance-readiness certifications, underwriting readiness certifications, risk-transfer ratings, risk engineering approvals, coverage opinions, capacity opinions, premium adequacy opinions, or risk acceptance findings.
Insurability depends on the insurer, reinsurer, risk appetite, coverage type, jurisdiction, policy wording, risk controls, exposure data, loss history, market conditions, legal terms, claims environment, pricing, capacity, and underwriting review. GRA does not decide those factors.
A matter may have an insurance-readiness record and still be difficult or impossible to insure. A project may be discussed in an Insurance-Readiness Room and still lack sufficient data, risk controls, governance, or market appetite for coverage. A protection-gap map may identify need without showing that insurance is available.
Any claim that something is “GRA-certified insurable,” “GRA-approved for insurance,” “insurance-ready by GRA,” or “covered through GRA” is prohibited unless a specifically approved factual statement exists, and even then it must not imply coverage or underwriting.
GRA supports readiness. It does not certify insurability.