| UN Body to Finalise Action on Ship Emissions
UK: October 7, 2008
LONDON - Curbing greenhouse gas emissions from ships, possibly by including
the sector for the first time in an emissions trading scheme, tops the
agenda at a meeting of the industry's top regulatory body in London this
week.
The week-long UN International Maritime Organisation (IMO) meeting will
decide how best to reduce CO2 gases, either by imposing a fuel tax, or using
more complex market-based instruments like emissions trading.
"The big issue this week is with these so-called market-based instruments
and whether shipping is included in an emissions trading scheme at a global
level," said Simon Bennett, secretary at the International Chamber of
Shipping.
The IMO hopes the action plans agreed will be enough to prevent the United
Nations from imposing its own emissions rules at a Climate Change Conference
in Copenhagen in December 2009.
Shipping contributed about 3.5 percent of global CO2 emissions in 2007, more
than previously thought, a scientific report commissioned for the IMO
earlier this year found. That compared with about 2 percent from aviation in
2005. But it is climbing as global seaborne trade expands.
Both sectors are excluded from national measures of CO2 emissions under the
Kyoto Protocol on warming -- the only emissions excluded from inventories
under the treaty which critics say leaves them in a policy blind spot.
Billed as one of the most critical to the sector in years, insiders say it
is the last chance for the industry to tackle warming gases. The industry
has been criticised for dragging its feet over emissions.
Bennett said world shipping, which carries 90 percent of the world's traded
goods by volume, was trying to avoid having regional standards imposed on it
which it says would damage it.
"It has to be done within the context of IMO," he said. Bennett said the
European Commission, the European Parliament and regulatory bodies in the
United States have been happy to give the IMO room to come up with a
solution by the end of 2009.
"But the industry through IMO must now deliver or they will impose their own
regional standards."
(Reporting by Stefano Ambrogi; editing by Christopher Johnson)
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
 |