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About 90 percent of world trade is transported by sea, with shipping accounting for an estimated 2.2 percent of global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions and forecast to rise dramatically unless action is taken.
The draft reforms of the EU’s carbon market post-2020 that were adopted by the European Parliament on Wednesday could result in emissions from the shipping sector being included in the bloc’s emissions trading system (ETS) for the first time.
But the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS), which represents more than 80 percent of the world’s merchant fleet, argued that efforts should be focused through the United Nations’ shipping agency, the IMO.
“EU member states, which are also members of IMO, now have a duty to reject these unhelpful proposals,” said Simon Bennett, director of policy and external relations at the ICS.
“Trying to include thousands of small shipping companies — including thousands of companies not based in the EU — into a system designed for major EU power-generating companies and steel and cement producers will only complicate this reform.”
The IMO has said that inclusion of emissions from ships in a European Union ETS significantly risks undermining efforts on a global level.
IMO Secretary General Kitack Lim said last month that such a move “could easily be the first step on a slippery slope towards fragmentation of the regulatory regime that controls global shipping”.
Environmental campaigners, meanwhile, welcomed the European Parliament’s stance.
Bill Hemmings, of green lobby group Transport & Environment, said that EU governments must support the draft reforms and the plan for ship CO2 emissions to be included in the ETS if the IMO fails to act.
Last year the IMO laid out a “road map” towards the adoption of final CO2 reduction commitments in 2023.
(Reporting by Jonathan Saul and Susanna Twidale; Editing by David Goodman)
(c) Copyright Thomson Reuters 2017.
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