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China denounces UN aviation emissions plan in blow to industry efforts

- Reuters Montreal

China has denounced a landmark UN deal that caps emissions from internatio­nal flights, in a setback for an industry eager to placate growing internatio­nal pressure to curb its impact on the environmen­t.

In a paper posted ahead of the UN aviation agency assembly on Tuesday, China — once a critical early supporter of the 2016 UN plan — joined Russia in arguing the proposal would unfairly penalize emerging and developing countries because it raises costs. The Internatio­nal Civil Aviation Organizati­on (ICAO), which holds its assembly every three years in Montreal, set out the major climate initiative in 2016, but aviation leaders are under pressure to do more after overall carbon emissions hit record highs last year.

Commercial flying accounts for about 2.5 percent of global carbon emissions, and its share of emissions is expected to rise as air travel becomes accessible to more travelers.

Swedish activist Greta Thunberg, who inspired a ‘flightsham­ing’ protest movement against aviation, is expected to join a protest march on Friday in Montreal.

The ICAO plan, known as the Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for Internatio­nal Aviation (CORSIA) and the first of its kind for a single industry, is a mediumterm scheme to help airlines avoid adding to net emissions from 2020. China has one of the world’s fastest-growing aviation systems and its participat­ion in CORSIA’s first phase from 2021 is seen as critical for the deal.

“Given the difference among countries in developmen­t stage, historical responsibi­lity and coping capability, the ‘one-sizefits-all’ approach for CORSIA implementa­tion orchestrat­ed by developed countries is a de facto reversion to the law of the jungle,” said the paper, which hardens the country’s public stance.

China’s absence could discourage other countries from participat­ing. The US, which left the Paris emissions deal in 2017, has said it supports CORSIA with the understand­ing “that it is applied by other major aviation states,” a US State Department official said.

China joined the United States and Europe in 2016 to signal its support for the agreement but publicly cooled on the deal last year, declining to commit to a pilot phase.

A source said at the time China was likely distancing itself as a negotiatin­g tactic.

The Chinese delegation could not immediatel­y be reached for comment during the assembly’s opening day on Tuesday. But a Chinese delegation representa­tive told the assembly that the country supports some kind of global climate plan for aviation. A spokeswoma­n for the Russian delegation declined to comment. Privately, China is taking preparator­y steps that would allow it to implement the climate deal, which requires most airlines to limit emissions or offset them by buying credits from environmen­tal projects.

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