The Capital

Maritime group backs carbon price for big ships

- By Frank Jordans

BERLIN — A major maritime industry associatio­n Monday backed plans for a global surcharge on carbon emissions from shipping to help fund the sector’s shift toward climate-friendly fuels.

The Internatio­nal Chamber of Shipping said it’s proposing to the United Nations that all vessels trading globally above a certain size should pay a set amount per metric ton of carbon dioxide they emit.

Environmen­tal groups welcomed the proposal to the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on, a U.N. body, but cautioned that it doesn’t specify what carbon price would be supported by the group, which represents commercial shipowners and operators covering over 80% of the world merchant fleet.

“We will know they are serious about real progress when they embrace a level of ambition consistent with what climate vulnerable island nations have already proposed,” said Aoife O’Leary, director of global transporta­tion at the Environmen­tal Defense Fund.

The shipping industry is estimated to account for nearly 3% of the greenhouse gas emissions that are driving global warming.

The Marshall Islands and the Solomon Islands, two nations with large shipping fleets whose territorie­s are threatened by climate change, have suggested a carbon levy starting at $100 per ton.

“This proposal sets out how to practicall­y create a market-based measure for the global shipping industry, in order to quickly move towards an effective price,” said Guy Platten, the secretary-general of the Internatio­nal Chamber of Shipping. “Rather than make guesses for PR purposes, we want to come to a number that will decarboniz­e the sector without disenfranc­hising huge proportion­s of the developing world on the way.”

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