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Insurance That Understands the Livestock Supply Chain 

Livestock production represents a long-term genetic investment supported by a capital-intensive feeding model and a highly structured, contract-driven supply chain. 

At Agripro Insurance Brokers, we provide livestock insurance solutions that protect producers and vertically integrated meat operations to deliver tailored risk solutions that reflect the commercial realities of livestock production.  

Comprehensive Risk Management for Livestock Producers

Our approach ensures every stage of the supply chain is protected:

  • Identifying where value is truly concentrated across the production cycle 
  • Structuring agreed-value and mortality programs aligned to feeding stages and market outcomes 
  • Protecting genetic assets, transit exposures, and critical supply chain dependencies 

For operators within the red meat sector, a review of how your current insurance program responds to genetic loss, transit incidents, third-party disruption, and cyber risk is critical to ensuring alignment with your operational risk profile. 

Beef supply chain livestock insurance protection

Insurance Solutions for the Beef Supply Chain

For vertically integrated (VI) livestock and meat businesses, insurance must go beyond traditional farm and property cover. Risk exists at every stage of the supply chain—from paddock to processor, through third-party storage, and into domestic or export markets.

Key coverages include:

All Risks Livestock Insurance Cover

All Risks Mortality (ARM) protects livestock from death, illness, or disease-whether on-farm, during transport, at feedlots, or at processors. ARM ensures livestock value is maintained throughout the production chain.

Marine Transit & Stock Throughput

Marine Transit and Stock Throughput insurance covers meat products in transport or storage at third-party cool rooms or export facilities. Includes refrigeration and frozen clauses to safeguard perishable product beyond standard property insurance.

Business Interruption & ISR Property

Business Interruption (BI) and ISR Property cover extends protection to losses arising from reduced processing capacity, inability to meet supply contracts, and additional costs from alternative transport or processing routes. Including Additional Increased Cost of Working ensures your business can continue operations even during unforeseen disruptions.

A contracted third-party meat processor suffered an insured loss, which included $5 million of finished product on-hook. The client relying on this processor faced reduced income due to limited kill space at alternative facilities, which prevented them from fulfilling supply contracts and ultimately led to a reduction in gross profits. Additional transport costs were incurred to move and process livestock at an alternate facility. The insured vertically integrated business had a well-structured insurance program with the below products, providing stability, protecting cashflow, and ensuring continuity even when disruption occurs outside the business’s direct control. 

  • Marine Transit: Includes refrigeration and frozen clauses, providing cover for the client’s meat while in storage or transit. 
  • ISR Property / Business Interruption: Tailored to extend cover for losses caused by specified customers or suppliers, including Additional Increased Cost of Working, such as costs incurred for additional transport and kill fees. 

When these covers are combined, the business is protected not only against physical loss of product, but also against the operational and financial impact of disruption anywhere along the supply chain. 

  • Marine Transit: Includes refrigeration and frozen clauses, providing cover for the client’s meat while in storage or transit. 
  • ISR Property / Business Interruption: Tailored to extend cover for losses caused by specified customers or suppliers, including Additional Increased Cost of Working, such as costs incurred for additional transport and kill fees. 

When these covers are combined, the business is protected not only against physical loss of product, but also against the operational and financial impact of disruption anywhere along the supply chain. 

In an industry where processing space is limited, export pathways are tightly controlled, and livestock values are high, the ability to insure the entire flow of production is critical. For vertically integrated businesses in particular, a well-structured insurance program can provide stability, protect cashflow, and ensure continuity even when disruption occurs outside the business’s direct control. 

Livestock Transit & Agreed-Value Insurance

Transport is one of the most overlooked, yet high-risk components of a livestock operation. Moving high-value animals between farms, feedlots, reproduction centres, and processors exposes them to hazards that go beyond typical farm risks. 

Road accidents, heat stress during extended hauls, loading and unloading injuries, and delays from traffic or weather can all have significant financial and operational impacts. For beef cattle producers, a single incident can represent a six-figure exposure because of the high purchase price, genetic value, and potential progeny of each animal

One client experienced a truck rollover while transporting 60 Wagyu heifers. The animals were insured under an agreed-value policy, meaning the declared value reflected their true genetic value rather than standard cattle rates. This meant the producer could recover the full replacement cost which considers genetic value potential. Without agreed-value cover, the claim would have been limited to general market rates, leaving the producer with a substantial financial gap. 

Agreed-value insurance is essential for Wagyu because: 

  • High-value animals: Standard market rates rarely reflect the replacement cost of elite sires or donor cows. 
  • Contracted sales: Producers often have forward supply agreements, meaning any loss affects both immediate revenue and future contract obligations. 
  • Genetic programs: Losing a high-index animal can disrupt breeding schedules, delayed progeny, and long-term herd improvement strategies. 

By recognising transit as more than just a logistical necessity, Wagyu operations can ensure insurance coverage matches the full spectrum of risk, from accident to operational delay. 

Cyber & Non-Contingent Business Interruption 

Modern livestock operations are increasingly reliant on third-party suppliers, processors, and digital systems. Non-contingent business interruption insurance and cyber protection are critical for mitigating risks outside your direct control. 

A feed supplier utilised by the feedlot was hit by a ransomware attack, halting deliveries across multiple Wagyu properties. Operations without non-contingent business interruption cover were left absorbing the cost of feeding delays, lost growth, and contract penalties. 

An accounts officer acted on a fraudulent email requesting payment to a substituted bank account. The deception was not identified until after funds had been transferred, resulting in a loss of $250,000. 

The financial loss was subsequently indemnified under the company’s Cyber Insurance program, which included a social engineering extension. 

These examples highlight two critical realities for livestock businesses: 

  • Reliance on third parties means your operation can be impacted even if your farm itself is not directly damaged. 
  • Digital systems from accounting software to traceability platforms are increasingly vulnerable to manipulation, with potentially catastrophic financial consequences. 

Insurance Considerations: 

  • Non-contingent Business Interruption protects against third-party disruptions that delay feed, transport, or processing schedules. 
  • Cyber policies should include coverage for invoice manipulation, CEO impersonation, email compromise, and social engineering. 
  • Policies must align with actual exposure, recognising that delays or diverted funds can impact production, breeding programs, and contractual obligations. 

Management Liability & Livestock Business Insurance

As livestock operations expand, internal risks increase alongside the value of the business. Often unnoticed until a major loss occurs, these risks can be just as financially damaging as external threats. 

Common issues include: 

  • Employee dishonesty: Theft of livestock funds, manipulated accounts, or intentional damage to animals or equipment. 
  • Regulatory breaches: Workplace safety investigations, environmental compliance, or contractual non-conformance. 
  • Workplace disputes: Unfair dismissal claims, bullying allegations, and shareholder disagreements. 

A livestock producer was subject to a workplace health and safety investigation following an incident where an employee sustained serious injuries while operating feeding equipment at a feedlot. The regulator alleged failures in maintaining safe systems of work, plant guarding, and staff training. 

The business faced prosecution under applicable workplace health and safety legislation, resulting in significant legal defence costs and potential fines. 

The company’s Management Liability policy responded under the Statutory Liability section, covering legal representation costs incurred in defending the proceedings. Subject to policy terms and legislative allowances, the policy also contributed toward the resulting pecuniary penalties. 

Management liability and internal risk cover are particularly critical for: 

  • Operations expanding into branded beef or processing, where payrolls, production systems, and legal responsibilities grow. 
  • Protecting relationships with partners, processors, and investors by demonstrating robust internal risk management. 
  • Ensuring that losses from internal mismanagement or deliberate acts do not derail long-term breeding and production strategies. 

Why This Matters

In many insurance programs, livestock, processing, transport, liability, and management are treated as separate risks. In livestock operations, however, they are all connected: a feeding delay can disrupt processor contracts, a genetic loss can set back years of breeding progress, and a machinery breakdown can compromise export supply.  

At Agripro Insurance Brokers, we structure insurance to reflect the full flow of value through your operation, protecting not just individual assets, but the entire system from the semen tank to the chiller door. Because in high-value production, comprehensive protection isn’t optional, it’s essential. 

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