General Insurance Article - Salvage loopholes need closing to thwart car thieves


Six loopholes in the salvage system which need to be addressed are being set out by the ABI’s Director of General Insurance Policy, James Dalton, at a speech to the salvage trade body later.

 The Salvage Code of Practice – a voluntary agreement on how written-off vehicles should be processed and categorised – has been blamed by some for creating a market for stolen cars. West Midlands police have identified an issue with criminals stealing vehicles to use for parts to go in write-offs which are considered safe to return to the roads and have been bought cheaply at auction.

 Speaking to the British Vehicle Salvage Federation’s AGM, James will reject calls to crush higher numbers of vehicles simply to inconvenience criminals, highlighting the cost to the environment and waste of materials.

 Instead, steps should be taken to improve the security of the salvage chain. In particular, James challenges the salvage industry to reconsider why it allows salvage vehicles purchased at auction to be paid for in cash, given the fears that have been raised about the involvement of organised crime gangs.

 The six potential loopholes James identifies, through which criminals may exploit the salvage process, are:

 weaknesses in the online notification process of changing registered keepers of vehicles;
 deficiencies in the process for obtaining duplicate or replacement logbooks potentially enabling criminals to easily “clone” a vehicle’s identity;
 the fact that a vehicle can be a financial write off but will retain its MOT certificate;
 the lack of a Vehicle Identity Check (VIC) for repaired write-off vehicles;
 the lack of a sufficiently robust ‘know your customer’ and ID verification process at vehicle salvage auctions;
 that salvaged vehicles can be purchased in cash at auction.

 One auction firm has already stopped accepting cash payments and others in the salvage industry are encouraged to follow suit.

 James Dalton is due to say: “What we as an industry are not prepared to do… is to mandate an increase in the number of vehicles that should be repaired given the safety issues that would pose. Nor are we prepared to crush a larger number of vehicles that are perfectly repairable. This would increase costs and represent significant unnecessary waste and damage to the environment. That, it seems to me, would be a disproportionate response to the problem of increased vehicle theft.

 “The solution lies in a coordinated approach involving insurers, salvage dealers, vehicle manufacturers, Government and the Police. I am confident that coordinated approach exists and it now needs to be given the opportunity to work through the issues. But the public also have an important role to play – motorists should be wary of buying second-hand cars that are much cheaper than might reasonably be expected. The old adage applies – if a deal seems too good to be true, it probably is. And in this instance, the car may have been poorly repaired with stolen parts, with all of the risks inherent in this for the purchaser.”

 You can see a full copy of the speech here.

Back to Index


Similar News to this Story

Pet insurance premiums rise exceeding March 2024 levels
The latest Pet Insurance Pricing Index from pricing experts Pearson Ham Group shows a continued upward trend for Lifetime policies, the most popular t
Lloyds report strong performance and investor appeal
Insurance Capital Markets Research (ICMR) and the Lloyd’s Market Association (LMA) have released their 2nd annual report, the Lloyd’s 2025 Insights Re
Insurance customers save GBP100m as instalment costs fall
Consumer Intelligence launches APR Awareness Month to highlight true cost of insurance Instalments. Cost of living pressures and rising insurance prem

Site Search

Exact   Any  

Latest Actuarial Jobs

Actuarial Login

Email
Password
 Jobseeker    Client
Reminder Logon

APA Sponsors

Actuarial Jobs & News Feeds

Jobs RSS News RSS

WikiActuary

Be the first to contribute to our definitive actuarial reference forum. Built by actuaries for actuaries.