Advocates urge IMO to ambitiously cut climate-heating shipping emissions

As the International Maritime Organization (IMO) meeting on the reduction of climate heating emissions from the shipping sector (Intersessional Working Group on Reduction of Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Emissions from Ships, ISWG-GHG 18) began this week, the Clean Shipping Coalition called for the UN shipping body to agree on: 

  • Global fuel/Energy standards: Clear, enforceable fuel/energy standards will catalyze the transition to clean energy. By incentivizing early investment in wind power and zero-GHG fuels, these standards will reduce emissions and spur the creation of green jobs and resilient economies worldwide.
  • Equitable implementation of a pollution fee: Holding polluters accountable via a greenhouse gas emission levy would provide a clear market signal to drive emission reductions and ensure a just and equitable transition to clean shipping. The resulting revenue can be used to support vulnerable nations and ensure all can play a part in the energy transition.

Delaine McCullough, Ocean Conservancy’s Shipping Emissions Policy Manager and President of the Clean Shipping Coalition, said: “IMO member states meeting to discuss the shipping sector’s contribution to the climate crisis must agree an ambitious set of new climate measures, including a global zero- and near-zero GHG fuel standard and a levy on ship fuel to drive emission reductions and ensure a just climate transition for international shipping.

“But this will only tackle half of shipping’s climate problem. To keep the cost of the shipping energy transition down and ensure that emission cuts happen quickly enough to meet the IMO’s 2030 and 2040 climate goals, these measures must be aligned with an ambitious, transparent and enforceable energy efficiency measure. 

“To build a more ocean-friendly shipping industry, member states must ensure that both the fuel standard and levy align with the concurrent revision of the IMO’s Carbon Intensity Indicator, a measure designed to force more efficient and less GHG-intensive shipping.

“The IMO’s revision of its Carbon Intensity Indicator, a metric for measuring and regulating ships’ carbon emissions, provides an opportunity to slash the shipping industry’s outsized contribution to the climate crisis by putting in place ambitious regulation that will ensure that ships get from A to B more slowly and efficiently and is essential for meeting the IMO’s 2030 emission-reduction targets in the most cost-effective way.

“During this week’s meeting, IMO Member States must ensure that the agreement on a global fuel standard and levy, is aligned with a strong Carbon Intensity Indicator, ahead of April’s Intersessional Working Group on Air Pollution and Energy Efficiency, in order to set of transparent, ambitious and enforceable new requirements for the efficient operation of ships. This is how we build a more ocean-friendly industry.”

Anaïs Rios, Shipping Policy Officer, Seas at Risk, said: “2025 is a make-or-break year for shipping to clean up its act.

“Current IMO talks revolve around the adoption of an ambitious levy, accelerating the shift to clean, zero-emission fuels and prioritizing energy-efficient vessels. Striving for a high levy must unlock investments to uptake wind propulsion technology – harnessing the only true zero-emitting fuel that is readily available at the high seas: wind. 

“It’s time for the shipping dinosaurs to leave the fossil fuel era behind and embrace real solutions for the well-being of the people and the planet.” 

Constance Dijkstra, IMO Policy Manager at Transport & Environment, said: “Member states need to get their act together and decide once and for all what kind of fuels and energy they want to incentivize.

“We are two months away from the April deadline, and there is still no agreement as to what a clean fuel is. Achieving shipping’s transition from fossil fuels must go through an immediate shift to energy efficiency and a gradual uptake of fuel from renewable energy, but early incentives for both are an absolute must if we want to get to near-zero by 2050.”

Photo credit: Pixabay/ Juli-s

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