Texas Infrastructure Insurance: Electrical, Utility & Mechanical

High voltage infrastructure construction in Texas
Infrastructure projects in North Texas require specialized Excess & Surplus (E&S) risk transfer, not standard admitted policies.

Updated: · Approx. 6 minute read

COMMERCIAL RISK · FRISCO, TX

Texas Infrastructure Insurance: Why Standard Policies Fail Electrical & Utility Contractors

If you are building the Texas grid, piping refineries, or climbing towers, a standard Business Owners Policy (BOP) isn’t coverage—it’s a contract breach waiting to happen.

TL;DR FOR BUSY CONTRACTORS

Standard market carriers are excellent for offices and retail shops, but they often exclude the specific high-hazard risks found in infrastructure work. If your policy has an “Action-Over” exclusion or limits work height, your Certificate of Insurance (COI) will likely be rejected by the General Contractor.

FAST ANSWER

  • The Problem: Admitted carriers (the big brand names) often auto-decline work involving heights, excavation, or “hot work” (welding).
  • The Consequence: You win the bid, but your insurance is rejected during the compliance audit, delaying mobilization.
  • The Fix: Moving your liability to the Excess & Surplus (E&S) market, which is purpose-built for high-risk infrastructure contracts.

The “Friday Afternoon” Compliance Gap

It happens almost every week. A contractor calls us with an urgent problem. They just landed a massive MSA (Master Service Agreement) for a solar field in West Texas or a refinery expansion. They sent their standard insurance certificate to the project owner, assuming their “Electrical Contractor” policy was sufficient.

Then came the rejection email.

“Your policy excludes Action-Over claims.”
“Your umbrella doesn’t follow form.”
“You don’t have pollution coverage for your fuel tanks.”

Their current agent—often a great professional who handles their home and auto perfectly—simply doesn’t have access to the specialty markets required for industrial construction. The Texas Department of Insurance regulates these markets differently, and standard policies just aren’t built for the indemnification clauses found in heavy industrial contracts.

The Standard Market Gap: Why You Get Declined

Insurance carriers in the “Standard Market” (the household names) operate on a model of high volume and low severity. They are fantastic for accountants, flower shops, and light IT consultants.

If you are an Electrical, Mechanical, or Utility contractor, you represent a different risk profile. You have fleet vehicles driving millions of miles. You have employees hanging off towers or working in trenches. To a standard carrier, this is often outside their “appetite.”

The issue isn’t the agent; it’s the carrier’s filing. Standard carriers file strict guidelines with the state that prevent them from writing certain high-hazard class codes. This leads to misclassification—labeling a “High Voltage Line Worker” as a “General Electrician” just to get the system to accept the quote. That works until a claim happens, and the adjuster denies it for material misrepresentation.

The 3 “Contract Killers” Hidden in Standard Policies

If you haven’t had your policy audited by an infrastructure specialist, check page 40 of your General Liability policy. You might find one of these three business-ending exclusions.

1. The Action-Over Exclusion

This is the silent killer in construction contracts. In simple terms, if one of your employees gets hurt and collects Workers’ Comp, they usually can’t sue you. But they can sue the General Contractor or Property Owner. The GC then turns around and sues you (because you signed an indemnification agreement). This is an “Action-Over” claim.

Many standard policies strictly exclude this. If you work in heavy infrastructure, this exclusion renders your policy non-compliant for almost every major MSA.

2. The “Residential Only” Endorsement

We see this frequently with commercial business insurance packages. A contractor grows from wiring houses to commercial tilt-walls, but their policy still has a designated endorsement limiting operations to “Residential 1-4 Family Dwellings.” If you have a fire at a commercial site, you have zero coverage.

3. The Pollution Gap

Do you haul diesel to your job site? Do you install refrigerant lines? A standard commercial auto policy rarely covers the cleanup costs if you spill 50 gallons of fuel into a Frisco storm drain. That is an EPA nightmare that comes out of your pocket unless you have specific pollution endorsements.

Our Specialty Divisions

At The Agent’s Office®, we recognize that infrastructure risks require a different toolkit. We built dedicated programs with wholesale access specifically for the trades that build the grid.

1. Electrical & Solar Division
For commercial electricians, EV charging station installers, and solar EPCs. We understand the coverage differences between rooftop solar and utility-scale solar farms.

2. Industrial Mechanical & Piping
For the crews working “inside the fence” at refineries, ammonia plants, and manufacturing hubs. We address ISNetworld® grading issues directly.

3. High Voltage & Utility
For transmission, distribution, and substation work. We can secure the Wildfire Liability buybacks that are becoming mandatory in Texas.

View the full details of these programs here →

The Real Cost: Cheap vs. Compliant

Margins are tight in construction, and saving money on premiums is tempting. But saving $2,000 on a premium is mathematically dangerous if it costs you a $200,000 contract or leaves you with a $1M uninsured lawsuit.

ScenarioStandard Policy ResultSpecialty Program Result
Employee injures third partyCoverage Denied (Subcontractor Exclusion)Covered (Broad Form CG 20 10)
GC Audits your COIRejected (Missing Primary/Non-Contributory)Accepted (Blanket Endorsements included)
Vehicle causes spill$50k Cleanup Bill (Pollution Excluded)Covered (Broadened Auto Endorsement)

According to OSHA statistics, the hazards in heavy infrastructure require robust protection. You cannot “self-insure” these risks by buying the wrong policy.

The Agent’s Office® Advantage

We are a local, independent agency in Frisco, Texas. We aren’t a call center. When you call us, you are talking to agents who know the difference between distribution and transmission lines.

We work alongside the standard market. In fact, many standard agents refer these complex risks to us because they know we have the E&S access to write them correctly. We structure policies that actually meet the requirements of your MSA, allowing you to bid with confidence.

Stop Letting Insurance Slow You Down

Check out our Industries page to see exactly how we service your trade.

P.S. Want to stay smarter than your competition? Like our Facebook page for weekly insights on Texas insurance markets.

FAQs about Infrastructure Insurance

Why does my General Contractor require “Primary and Non-Contributory” language?

This clause prevents your insurance company from asking the GC’s insurance company to share the cost of a claim. It forces your policy to pay first. Most standard policies do not include this automatically, causing COI rejection.

What is the difference between Admitted and E&S carriers?

Admitted carriers are backed by the state guaranty fund but have strict rules and often avoid unique risks. E&S (Excess & Surplus) carriers are non-admitted but have the freedom to insure high-risk trades like roofing, utility work, and heavy manufacturing.

Can you fix my ISNetworld® grade?

Indirectly, yes. A poor grade is often caused by insurance limits that don’t match the client’s requirements or missing safety manuals. We fix the insurance gaps to help get your grade back to an “A”.

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George Azide

George Azide

Founder & Principle, The Agent’s Office® · Frisco, Texas

George is the Founder of The Agent’s Office® in Frisco, Texas. As an independent agent, he specializes in translating complex insurance terms into plain-English strategies for families and business owners. George helps clients across North Texas protect their income and assets through customized insurance solutions.

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