Global Times

Global airline CO2 scheme

CORSIA not to replace EU carbon market

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The UN aviation agency’s planned scheme for offsetting emissions from internatio­nal flights will supplement, not replace, the European Union carbon market, the EU’s transport commission­er said on Monday.

With the United Nations planning a 2021 launch of CORSIA, its global scheme to help airlines offset their carbon emissions, some EU lawmakers and environmen­tal groups want assurances that the European Commission will not remove aviation from the EU Emissions Trading System (ETS).

“CORSIA will not put the ETS at stake. It will not replace the ETS. It will complement the ETS,” Transport Commission­er Adina Valean told lawmakers on Monday.

Flights between European countries are currently covered by the EU carbon market, which requires airlines to buy permits to cover some emissions from these trips.

The UN aviation agency ICAO wants the EU to remove these flights from its carbon market so that CORSIA can be the only market-based measure tackling internatio­nal aviation emissions.

The Commission, the 27-nation EU’s executive, has yet to lay out how the two systems will coexist. Valean said the Commission would assess the best way for countries to comply with both “EU and internatio­nal obligation­s.”

CORSIA plans to use a system of “offsetting” to cap emissions from internatio­nal flights at 2020 levels. From 2021, airlines would have to buy carbon offset credits to cover any emissions above the 2020 baseline.

Critics say this would allow aviation emissions to keep rising, if airlines bought enough offset credits.

“As an offsetting scheme with a very weak target, the global aviation carbon market will not provide the price signal needed for airlines to clean up their act,” said Gilles Dufrasne,

policy officer at Carbon Market Watch. But Valean said the UN scheme is “the only realistic option” to tackle emissions from internatio­nal aviation – including from flights between EU and non-EU countries that are not covered by the bloc’s carbon market. Without EU support, CORSIA could “fall to pieces,” she added. “If the EU were to walk away from CORSIA, this would provide a pretext for some major global players to bury CORSIA, do nothing to reduce internatio­nal emissions and set back internatio­nal negotiatio­ns within ICAO by many years.”

Countries’ participat­ion in CORSIA is voluntary until 2027, when it becomes mandatory.

Valean also said that implementi­ng the Corsia scheme will not stop the EU from pressing ahead with plans to review its carbon market in 2021.

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