The Borneo Post (Sabah)

World shipping industry agrees to halve carbon emissions by 2050

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LONDON, United Kingdom: Members of the UN Internatio­nal Maritime Organisati­on struck a deal to halve carbon dioxide emissions from shipping by 2050 in a deal that will force the industry to redesign fleets.

“The initial strategy envisages for the first time a reduction in total GHG (Greenhouse Gas) emissions by at least 50 per cent by 2050 compared to 2008,” the IMO said in a statement.

Major shipping nations such as Saudi Arabia and the United States had objected to earlier drafts in two weeks of discussion at the 173-member organisati­on based in London.

Some countries such as the Marshall Islands, which are at risk of rising seas but are also a major flag state, had wanted a stronger commitment and the EU wanted a 70 to 100 per cent cut.

But the agreement was widely hailed by stakeholde­rs.

“This is a ground-breaking agreement – a Paris agreement for shipping – that sets a very high level of ambition for the future reduction of carbon dioxide emissions,” the Internatio­nal Chamber for Shipping’s secretary general Peter Hinchliffe said.

“We are confident this will give the shipping industry the clear signal it needs to get on with the job of developing zero carbon dioxide fuels so that the entire sector will be in a position to decarbonis­e completely,” he said.

Marshall Islands President Hilda Heine also praised the deal.

“Today the IMO has made history. While it may not be enough to give my country the certainty it wanted, it makes it clear that internatio­nal shipping will now urgently reduce emissions and play its part in giving my country a pathway to survival,” she said in a statement.

Maersk, the world’s largest container shipping company, tweeted: “We were pushing for stronger targets but still a great step that IMO seeks to halve the shipping sector’s greenhouse gases by 2050”. — AFP

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