Fri 5 Nov 2010, 07:11 GMT

Call for shipping to 'act now' to cut emissions


Consultancy calls for the maritime industry to develop voluntary market-based measures to reduce GHG emissions.



Maritime greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions consultancy Carbon Positive says the 'slow pace' of GHG regulation in shipping opens up a great opportunity for forward-thinking, innovative members of the shipping community to develop pioneering market-based initiatives; programs that will help the sector prepare for any future compliance obligations, reward early actors for their contribution, and demonstrate decisive action to those outside the sector.

A white paper issued today Carbon Positive outlines how voluntary, market-based action can help prepare industries for compliance-based schemes, stimulate technological advance, and inform the development of good regulation along the way. Continuing this theme, Carbon Positive will be initiating a consultation process to develop an action programme for trading experiments in 2011.

Carbon Positive CEO Helena Athoussaki said: "Given the understandable difficulties IMO has in developing GHG regulation, we propose an experimental emissions-trading programme in shipping, based on voluntary participation, to complement the IMO's work on market-based measures."

"We ask the IMO and governments to embrace such early action and recognise credible reductions under any future regulatory regime," Ms Athoussaki said.

"The recent MEPC 61 meeting at IMO underscored the ongoing difficulties of securing consensus on GHG reduction measures in the face of the divergent principles of the IMO's equal treatment of all parties and the UNFCCC's common but differentiated responsibilities. It is also clear the work of MEPC's expert group on market-based measures will yet take some time to ensure that any programme adopted is both balanced and workable. The Secretary-General's opening speech at MEPC acknowledged the need for a considered approach that can't be rushed," Carbon Positive said in a statement.

"Based on its 30 years experience in emissions markets and regulation, Carbon Positive supports the IMO's position as a responsible one. Yet Secretary-General Mitropoulos also identified the need to move forward on GHG control 'in good time so that entities outside this forum will be given no reason to doubt the seriousness with which we approach our task'," Carbon Positive added.

John Palmisano, Commercial Director at Carbon Positive, said: "There is a way to reconcile these conflicting imperatives. An opportunity exists for those in the maritime sector of a mind to act now to show the sector is taking real and measurable action to reduce GHG emissions. "

"The direct regulation of maritime GHGs is inevitable, and whether these take the form of a market-based measure or not, credible voluntary market-based action can and should be rewarded," Mr Palmisano added.

A copy of the white paper can be viewed by visiting the address below:

http://www.carbonpositive.net/fetchfile.aspx?fileID=192


AuctionConnect and Asyad Shipping logos. Asyad Shipping adopts AuctionConnect digital bunker platform under three-year deal  

Middle East shipping company to implement auction-based procurement system across fleet operations.

Fuel for thought: LNG for Cruise report cover. LNG remains the most deployable decarbonisation option for cruise shipping, Lloyd’s Register report finds  

Classification society’s latest research examines the fuel’s role in the sector’s energy transition and pathway to net zero.

Dr. Ibrahim Muritala, ABS. ABS engineer to discuss performance-based hydrogen framework at SPE symposium  

Dr Ibrahim Muritala to join panel examining shift from colour-based hydrogen labelling to carbon intensity metrics.

Cosco Shipping Peony vessel. Cosco Shipping completes methanol dual-fuel retrofits on four ultra-large container vessels  

Chinese shipping line retrofits 20,000-teu and 13,800-teu vessels with methanol propulsion systems.

Launching ceremony of Maran Myrto vessel. Chinese yard launches LNG dual-fuel Suezmax  

Crude carrier with LNG propulsion launched in Jiangsu province.

Keel-laying ceremony of a vessel with builder's hull no. 0315846. Keel laid for LNG dual-fuel crude oil tanker  

Chinese yard begins construction on 155,500-dwt vessel with Lloyd’s Register classification.

BW Lesmes alongside Levante LNG vessel. BW LNG vessel completes first gassing-up operation with bunker barge  

BW Lesmes transitions from drydock to cargo readiness using an LNG bunker barge.

Mark Bell, SGMF. LNG marine fuel shows up to 29% emissions reduction in new SGMF study  

Latest life cycle assessment shows improved methane slip control, with well-to-wake reductions of up to 25%.

Michelle McDade, Global Fuel Supply. Blue Energy Partners appoints Michelle McDade as head of operations  

McDade brings more than eight years of bunkering experience to the Oslo-based role.

Person signing a document. Venture Energy signs green methanol supply deal with Shenji Energy  

Hong Kong-based firm to purchase ISCC EU-certified biomass-derived methanol for shipping clients.