Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Ship owners tried to cruise around new pollution rules

- By Ed Davey

The world’s ocean freight shipping companies recently called on internatio­nal maritime authoritie­s to exclude pollution that their vessels spew in bad weather from new regulation­s, a condition that would apply almost a third of the time in the Atlantic.

However, the effort failed Friday. Under internatio­nal laws due to take effect in 2023, all big vessels will be rated from A to E by how much carbon dioxide flows from their stacks for every mile traveled and ton carried. The idea is to incentiviz­e owners to install cleaner technologi­es. Although the proposed rules are currently toothless, nation-states might bring in penalties for high-polluting ships in the future.

In April, four trade groups, including the World Shipping Council, complained that the new rules would penalize ships that have to sail in rough conditions. This burns more fuel and produces more carbon dioxide, meaning ships in windy seas would get a worse carbon efficiency rating.

So the trade groups proposed to the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on in written submission­s that periods of eight hours or more undertaken in bad weather be struck from the scoring entirely. They defined bad weather as wind speeds of 28 knots — about 32 mph —or waves more than 13 feet high.

“It would pretend that ships hardly ever sail in stormy weather and only calculate the carbon intensity of the ship under the most favorable conditions,” said Bryan Comer, who heads up the marine program at the Internatio­nal Council of Clean Transporta­tion.

The Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on, made up of member countries, has rejected that idea.

Going slow is one of the best ways to reduce emissions. If they had won the exemption, ships could have gone as fast as they wanted in bad weather, Comer said, burning more fuel without it showing up in their ratings. This might enable them to hit tougher deadlines and win contracts.

“There is actually an incentive if this had gone forward to sail in adverse weather,” said Comer.

According to the World Shipping Council, waves exceed 13 feet in the North Atlantic more than 30% of the time.

The World Shipping Council argued that factors like extreme weather “distort the picture and make the numbers less effective at driving the change we want.”

The trade group conceded it was “logical at first glance” that the proposal might incentive ships to sail into heavy weather, but said the high cost of fuel made this very unlikely. It pointed out sailing in rough seas can use 30% more fuel than in calmer weather, thus saddling ships with a worse rating. Ships that routinely traverse calm waters such as those off Nigeria would more easily win top grades while those that have to cross the Atlantic would automatica­lly look worse.

“Failing to address these inequities. unfairly labels certain ships as ‘inferior’ because of the routes they serve,” the World Shipping Council said.

James Gamble, a program director at Pacific Environmen­t, which works to protect the Pacific Ocean and coastal communitie­s, has also been following the negotiatio­ns.

The proposed regulation­s should be left as they are to achieve 2030 emissions targets, he said. While trade groups can give good advice on cutting emissions, their primary focus is on making members money, he said.

What was really at issue, Gamble said, is that “ships that are low-rated will be at a market disadvanta­ge with customers who want to transport their goods with

 ?? DOVARGANES/AP
DAMIAN ?? The marine shipping industry faces new regulation­s to address carbon pollution and its trade groups are seeking exemptions for some pollution.
DOVARGANES/AP DAMIAN The marine shipping industry faces new regulation­s to address carbon pollution and its trade groups are seeking exemptions for some pollution.

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