Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Shipping industry seeks global emissions rules

- AUGUSTA SARAIVA AND OLIVIA ROCKEMAN

The ocean shipping industry, among the world’s biggest polluters, is asking a key regulator to overhaul its emissions directives so that all carriers are working off the same rulebook as they make the expensive changes needed to cut output of harmful carbons.

With roughly 90% of global trade transporte­d by sea, the industry emits more carbon annually as Germany and the Netherland­s combined. And if shipping were a country, it would be the world’s sixth-biggest greenhouse­gas emitter, according to the World Economic Forum.

The World Shipping Council, whose members operate 90% of global container-carrying capacity, want the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on — a United Nations oversight body — to revisit its greenhouse- gasemissio­n regulation­s.

The council, whose members include A. P. Moller-Maersk, Cosco Shipping Holdings Co. and MSC Mediterran­ean Shipping Co., is asking for “global, enforcible multilater­al regulation to avoid the race to the bottom,” said Jan Hoffmann, head of trade logistics at the U.N. Conference on Trade and Developmen­t. “They don’t really mind that level of regulation as long as it’s the same for everybody.”

The Global Maritime Forum estimates that fully decarboniz­ing the shipping sector by 2050 will require as much as $95 billion of investment per year starting in the next decade. That compares with $25 billion climate change could cost the industry every year by the end of the century, according to an Environmen­tal Defense Fund report. The container port industry’s global net earnings in 2019 totaled about that amount.

Companies investing in alternativ­e energies “probably are going to get ahead in efficienci­es that will bring huge reductions in costs,” said Josue Velazquez Martinez, a lecturer at the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology Center for Transporta­tion and Logistics. “There is a keen interest.”

The Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on’s marine environmen­tal protection committee will meet in June to discuss the advancemen­t of its greenhouse-gas emission strategy.

The current framework establishe­s a 50% cut in emissions by 2050, well short of what’s required to align the sector with the Paris Agreement’s ambitions on limiting temperatur­e increases. To address that, the committee recommende­d all member states fully decarboniz­e by then, but a majority including Saudi Arabia and China voted against it last year.

Getting the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on’s 175 member states to reach consensus is far from easy. At the last session of the organizati­on in November, they failed to pass a tiny CO2based charge on vessels’ fuel consumptio­n, with many countries raising concerns about the levy.

In the European Union, there are plans to include ocean shipping in the bloc’s Emissions Trading System, which aims to boost uptake of sustainabl­e fuels. The system rules would apply to 100% of emissions for ships sailing to and from EU member states, and 50% of the discharges for ships traveling between the bloc and nonmember states.

Achieving the green transition is “both technicall­y and politicall­y very difficult,” said World Shipping Council President John Butler. “It’s a bit of a fool’s errand, frankly, to say ‘this is going to happen by this date’ or ‘this is going to happen by that date.’ What we need to do is keep moving forward.”

Cargo ships typically run on oil that produces particular­ly high carbon- dioxide emissions, but efforts to innovate are growing.

The number of zero-carbon shipping projects has almost doubled in the past year, according to the Getting to Zero Coalition, composed of more than 150 firms within the sector.

Maersk, the world’s secondlarg­est shipping line, alone consumes about 12 million tons of oil in a year, the same amount produced in the world daily. Still, it’s vowing to go carbon-neutral by 2040, a decade ahead of its own schedule.

The Copenhagen- based carrier intends to run its first methanol-fueled ship by summer of 2023, said Jacob Sterling, its head of decarboniz­ation. Finding fuel for the goal hasn’t been easy.

“We found ourselves in this chicken- and- egg dilemma where we tried to convince people to produce green methanol,” Sterling said. Providers refused to make a firm commitment because Maersk didn’t yet have any green ships that would run on that fuel. “It was like

we were going around in circles.”

At the same time, making the transition to cleaner fuel is going to be difficult, because “shipping will be competing for the same green electrons as other industries,” said Jan Dieleman, president of Cargill’s Ocean Transporta­tion business.

With many ports moving record cargo, the situation could get worse.

Assuming a steady growth rate, global trade volumes are expected to reach 120 billion tons in 2100 — but under the worst-case climate scenario, that growth could be stunted by as much as almost 10%, according to the Environmen­tal Defense Fund.

“As trade grows and we don’t move away from fossil fuels, then the emissions from the shipping sector will grow as well,” said Marie Cabbia Hubatova, one of the fund’s report’s authors. “One way to look at it is: ‘If I don’t decarboniz­e, then I’m basically self- destructiv­e. The emissions I produce are eventually going to cost me a lot of money in damage brought by climate change.’”

 ?? (Bloomberg/Bing Guan) ?? Container ships wait offshore at the Port of Long Beach in March 2021 in Long Beach, Calif.
(Bloomberg/Bing Guan) Container ships wait offshore at the Port of Long Beach in March 2021 in Long Beach, Calif.

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