Wed 7 Jun 2017 11:09

Shipowner associations encourage EU-China leadership in shaping IMO CO2 strategy


ECSA and ICS say US withdrawal from the Paris Climate Agreement should not jeopardise global CO2 reduction goals.



Following the decision of the United States to withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement, the European Community Shipowners' Associations (ECSA) and the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) have said that they encourage the intentions of the European Union and China to intensify cooperation in achieving a global climate deal for shipping.

The two shipping associations pointed out in a statement on Wednesday that during the 19th EU-China Summit held in Brussels last week, EU and Chinese leaders reaffirmed their commitment to implementing the Paris Agreement on climate change.

"The withdrawal of the United States from the Paris Climate Agreement should not jeopardise an ambitious global strategy to reduce the CO2 emissions of shipping," said ECSA Secretary General Patrick Verhoeven. "We are therefore pleased that the EU and China appear to be working towards reinforced co-operation on delivering a climate agreement for shipping at the International Maritime Organization."

Discussions on the IMO greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction strategy are due to start in a few weeks' time at the 71st session of the IMO Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC). The IMO aims to establish an initial strategy in 2018, which is to be finalized in 2023, after real-time data on CO2 emissions of global shipping have been collected and analysed.

Ahead of the MEPC meeting, the global shipping industry - represented by four international shipowner organisations - submitted a proposal to keep total global CO2 emissions below 2008 levels, and then progressively cut annual total emissions from the sector by 2050, by a percentage to be agreed by IMO.

"We call upon the EU and China, and indeed all IMO Member States, to support the industry proposals," said ICS Secretary General Peter Hinchliffe. "The priority of governments should be to focus on the development of alternative, fossil-free fuels, and IMO should assess whether holding CO2 below 2008 levels can be achieved with technical and operational measures alone."

Both the ECSA and ICS say they will continue to express concern about unilateral measures that the EU, China and other regional powers may be contemplating - including the European Parliament's push for the unilateral inclusion of shipping in the European Emission Trading Scheme (ETS), which the ECSA has vehemently spoken out against in the past.

"We remain firmly opposed to a patchwork of regional schemes that would distort international shipping markets while doing little to tackle the reduction of the global industry's actual emissions", stressed Verhoeven and Hinchliffe. "Imposing regional solutions will be counterproductive. It will anger developing nations that have agreed to participate in the IMO process despite their concerns about the implications for their economic development, making the prospect of a global agreement on truly meaningful CO2 reductions far more difficult if not impossible."

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