Just a pet point if mine El , everyone using a firearm for sporting purposes should have some form of insurance to cover their liability to a 3rd party . Honestly don’t assume that being on a clay pigeon shooting ground covers you for shooting someone or something .
You could have a negligent discharge tomorrow , shoot someone’s foot off and find out he’s a budding premiership signing , expensive ! kill their 100,000 guinea bull , or rearrange the body work on your mates hatchback . Obviously we all say it can’t happen to us , but …..
The relevance to licensing IMHO , is being an insured shooter shows you are exercising diligence , you wouldn’t drive without insurance would you ?
Nope, but I would like to think that any sincere, thinking, conscientious clay shooter ONLY loads their gun when it's over the bar and therefore only ever pointing downrange, and adheres to all the rules of decency, etiquette, and common sense regarding gun usage when around the stand, including if there's a misfire, so it's not in the same ballpark as a multi positional vehicle, able to travel at different speeds in different directions, with thousands of parts to go wrong, potentially fatally, and only held on the road at high velocity by about 18 square inches of rubber spread across 4 planes.
I get where you're coming from, but one is waaaaaay more lethal than the other, ironically, considering what the statistically actual more safe item is designed to do! (equivalently, from working in the fire service, my beef is people over a certain age NOT being tested for their driving ability regularly!)
I have never even thought that a club would have their own insurance for people participating there, and I know some grounds insist on it, and that's fine. There's always the never never, but I think this IS a personal choice, IF you're a sensible shooter and not a loon. Otherwise, you're joining the top trumps club of seeing how quickly you can squeeze being a vegan into the conversation to annoy people.
When incidents happen, literally every single occasion I'VE heard of, and even that's a crazy low figure, in the single digits in this country, since I started shooting is down to some biff doing something ridiculous or other and not excercising that due diligence you mentioned, but there you go
The key word you mentioned there in negligent, and every time one picks up a firearm, that person should absolutely, 100% be fully prepared to take into account what they have and what they are doing with it.