GRA protects Insurance-Readiness Rooms from underwriting confusion through clear role definitions, access controls, conflict disclosure, safe-meeting rules, non-attribution where appropriate, controlled feedback logs, risk-transfer diligence gap notes, protection-gap language discipline, reinsurance-relevance limits, confidentiality controls, public-use restrictions, correction pathways, and claims-discipline enforcement.
Key safeguards include:
insurance-readiness is defined as preparation, not coverage;
insurers are not treated as underwriters in the room;
reinsurers are not treated as capacity providers;
brokers are not allowed to conduct placement activity;
premium discussions are prohibited;
policy term discussions are prohibited;
capacity discussions are prohibited;
attribution is controlled;
feedback is framed as readiness input, not market indication;
marketing use is prohibited unless specifically approved;
public statements must include non-underwriting language;
misuse triggers correction or restriction.
The governing sentence should appear in room materials, feedback summaries, and public-safe outputs:
Insurance-Readiness Rooms produce readiness feedback, not underwriting signals.
That standard protects insurers, reinsurers, brokers, project proponents, public authorities, sponsors, GRA, GRF, GCRI, Nexus, and all participants.