47 governments, shipping industry propose text for IMO carbon tax
Carlos Barreto Valente
Business Developer & Project Manager | Renewables Energy (waste, water and eletricity) | Air Mobility | Facilities Management | Technology Driven and Energy Transition Advocate Hydrogen and Net Zero
The International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) has joined 47 governments in a joint submission to the final round of negotiations at the United Nations’ International Maritime Organization (IMO) to adopt a maritime greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions pricing mechanism for international shipping.
The joint text is supported by major shipping nations such as Greece, Japan, Korea and the United Kingdom, the world’s largest flag states including Bahamas, Liberia, Marshall Islands and Panama, all EU States (and the European Commission), other African countries such as Nigeria and Kenya, plus Small Island Developing States from the Caribbean and the Pacific.
The joint submission by governments sets out convergent regulatory text for amendments to the IMO MARPOL Convention, which will require shipping companies operating ships on international voyages to make GHG contributions per tonne of CO2e emitted to a new “IMO GHG Strategy Implementation Fund”.
The key purpose of this mandatory GHG charge will be to reduce the cost gap between zero/near-zero GHG emission (ZNZ) fuels (such as green methanol, ammonia and hydrogen) and conventional marine fuels, to incentivize the accelerated uptake of green energy sources.