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The DCMS Committee has written to the Chancellor asking him to
extend Government-backed insurance schemes to festivals and live
music events or face them disappearing from our fields and cities
for good.
At a crucial point in festival planning schedules, MPs warn that
organisers and investors are unable to risk repeating losses
sustained in 2020 unless events can be insured against
cancellation.
With the commercial insurance market not expected to offer
Covid-related insurance until 2022, a Government-backed scheme is
required for festivals to start planning their events and signing
contracts with artists and suppliers.
The appeal urges the Government to extend to other creative
industries the underwriting schemes already offered to the film
and television industries.
In 2019, festivals added £1.76 billion in gross value to the
economy, with almost 1 in 3 Britons watching Glastonbury on TV.
DCMS Committee Chair said:
“The Government is telling us that life should be getting
back to normal by the summer but unless it can provide a safety
net, it will be a summer without festivals. The industry
says that without government-backed insurance,
many festivals and live music events just won’t happen because
organisers can’t risk getting their fingers burnt for a second
year.
“The Committee has heard from festival organisers that
this is a matter of urgency. Insurance must be the first step in
unlocking the huge contribution that festivals make to our
economy, protecting not only the supply chains, but the musicians
who rely on them for work.
“The Government already offers a level of cover to the
film and television industries, now is the time to extend support
to other creative industries or risk losing some of our best
loved and world-renowned festivals.”