As a
response to the Paris Agreement on climate change, the International
Chamber of Shipping (ICS) has pledged national shipping associations’
support for the development of a timeline for the further reduction of
the shipping sector's GHG emissions.
ICS has proposed that the details of a CO2 reduction commitment should be developed by the IMO, as soon as possible.
The goal is to build on the substantial CO2 reductions already achieved
by shipping, and the mandatory IMO CO2 reduction regime, which is
already in force worldwide.
Responding to the expectation that the International Civil Aviation
Organisation (ICAO) may reach agreement this week on a CO2 reduction
plan for the aviation sector, ICS Chairman, Esben Poulsson, explained:
“Shipping is the only industrial sector which already has a mandatory
global CO2 reduction regime in place, applicable to the entire world
fleet and which predates the Paris Agreement by four years. Shipping has
a very good story to tell. The most recent data from 2014 shows that
shipping reduced its total CO2 emissions by over 10% in just five years,
despite continuing growth in maritime trade.”
“The binding IMO rules, in force worldwide since 2013, will mean that
future ships will be even more efficient and most ships built after 2025
will be at least 30% more efficient than those delivered in the
2000s. It is amazing to consider that the most efficient ships today
only burn 1 gram of fuel per tonne of cargo moved one kilometre. With
bigger ships, better engines, cleaner fuels and operational efficiency
measures, such as satellite-assisted speed management, we are confident
of reducing CO2 emissions per tonne-kilometre by 50% by 2050.”
The industry also wants IMO to respond to the challenge of addressing
the total CO2 emissions from the sector if demand for maritime trade
continues to increase due to population growth and economic development –
factors over which the industry has no control.
The first step will be a global CO2 data collection system for ships,
which IMO member states will officially establish this October, with
full industry support (see above). This system should then become fully
operational by 2018.
But ICS asserted that, in the same way that governments under the Paris
Agreement have set out Intended Nationally Determined Contributions
(INDCs) for reducing the total GHG emissions by their national
economies, IMO needs to do something similar on behalf of the
international shipping industry, even though it is a sector and not a
country.
Poulsson, explained: “We wish to see IMO member states adopt a course
similar to that agreed by governments in Paris and which reflects the
spirit of the Agreement. This will help IMO member states to demonstrate
they are serious about building on the real progress already made by
the shipping industry to reduce CO2. Our hope is that this can be done
in a way that will also be acceptable to developing nations whose
support will be vital if IMO is to continue making progress on a global
basis.”
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