UN shipping agency chief urges decisive action to decarbonise at environment talks

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The Elbeborg cargo freighter maneuvers into Canal Lock 3 on the Welland Canal near St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada, on Wednesday, June 21, 2023. The Welland Canal, which connects Lake Erie and Lake Ontario, handled 37 million tonnes of cargo last year. Photographer: James MacDonald/Bloomberg

Shipping transports around 90 per cent of world trade and accounts for nearly 3 per cent of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions.

PHOTO: BLOOMBERG

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- Countries must take decisive action at talks aimed at accelerating decarbonisation in the shipping industry, the United Nations’ shipping agency chief said on Monday, as pressure for change builds.

Shipping, which transports around 90 per cent of world trade and accounts for nearly 3 per cent of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions, is facing growing calls from environmentalists and investors to deliver more concrete action, including a carbon levy.

Delegates from the UN’s shipping agency, the International Maritime Organisation (IMO), are meeting in London this week for preliminary discussions ahead of next week’s crucial session of the IMO’s marine environment (MEPC) committee.

The IMO has pledged to halve greenhouse gas emissions from ships by 2050, from 2008 levels, a commitment that lags behind plans by the European Union and United States to reach net-zero emissions by that date.

The MEPC will finalise the draft 2023 strategy on reducing greenhouse gas emissions from ships and examine other measures including various proposals for a carbon levy.

“It is now time to work together on increasing the level of ambition for 2050 and establish the intermediate check points by 2030 and 2040,” IMO secretary-general Kitack Lim told the delegates.

“Do not wait for the last minute at MEPC to make the compromises and find the solutions, a positive outcome from this group is key to a success next week, and for the future work of this organisation.”

Mr Lim said 2023 is “IMO’s year of decisive climate action”, and “the stakes are high and the expectations even higher”. REUTERS

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