Current:Home > MyAn Ambitious Global Effort to Cut Shipping Emissions Stalls -ApexWealth
An Ambitious Global Effort to Cut Shipping Emissions Stalls
View
Date:2025-04-15 17:28:14
An ambitious, global agreement to cut greenhouse gas emissions from shipping in half by mid-century stalled as the International Maritime Organization (IMO) failed to approve any specific emission reduction measures at a meeting in London this week.
The IMO, a United Nations agency whose member states cooperate on regulations governing the international shipping industry, agreed in April to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from shipping 50 percent by 2050. The details—along with efforts to reduce the sulfur content in fuel oil, reduce plastic litter from the shipping industry, and steps toward banning the use of heavy fuel oil in the Arctic—were to be worked out at a meeting of its Marine Environment Protection Committee this week.
The committee considered a cap on ship speeds and other short-term measures that could reduce emissions before 2023, as well as higher efficiency standards for new container ships, but none of those measures was approved.
“We’ve seen no progress on the actual development of measures and lots of procedural wrangling,” said John Maggs, president of the Clean Shipping Coalition, an environmental organization. “We’ve effectively lost a year at a time when we really don’t have much time.”
The inaction comes two weeks after the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change released a report calling for steep, urgent reductions in greenhouse gas emissions.
Ship Speeds, Fuel Efficiency and Deadlines
Environmental advocates who were at the meeting in London favored placing a cap on ship speeds, which alone could reduce greenhouse gas emissions by roughly one-third, but that plan faced fierce opposition from the shipping industry.
The committee reached a tentative agreement on Thursday that would have required a 40 percent increase in the fuel efficiency of new container ships beginning in 2022, but the agreement was later blocked after pushback from industry and member states including the United States, Brazil, India and Saudi Arabia, Maggs said. The Marine Environmental Protection Committee plans to revisit the measure in May.
“This is about how serious the IMO and IMO member states are,” Maggs said. “A key part of that is moving quickly.” Maggs said. He said the failure to quickly ramp up ship efficiency requirements “makes it look like they are not serious about it.”
IMO delegates also worked fitfully on language about next steps, but in the end the language was weakened from calling for “measures to achieve” further reductions before 2023 to a line merely seeking to “prioritize potential early measures” aimed at that deadline.
While environmental advocates panned the revised wording, IMO Secretary-General Kitack Lim praised the agreement in a statement, saying it “sets a clear signal on how to further progress the matter of reduction of GHG [greenhouse gas] emissions from ships up to 2023.”
Banning Heavy Fuel Oil in the Arctic
Despite inaction on greenhouse gas reductions, IMO delegates continued to move forward on a potential ban on heavy fuel oil in the Arctic by the end of 2021.
The shipping fuel, a particularly dirty form of oil, poses a significant environmental hazard if spilled. It also emits high levels of nitrogen oxide, a precursor to ozone that can form near the earth’s surface, and black carbon, a short-lived climate pollutant that also adversely affects human health.
The proposal was introduced by delegates from a number of countries, including the United States, in April. The IMO’s Pollution Prevention and Response subcommittee is slated to develop a plan for implementing the ban when it meets in February.
During this week’s meeting, a delegation of Arctic Indigenous leaders and environmental advocates also put pressure on the cruise ship company Carnival Corporation about its fuel, demanding in a petition that Carnival cease burning heavy fuel oil in the Arctic.
“We’re at a critical time to protect what we have left,” Delbert Pungowiyi, president of the Native Village of Savoonga, Alaska, said in a statement. “It’s not just about protecting our own [people’s] survival, it’s about the good of all.”
veryGood! (6743)
Related
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- The Fed already had a tough inflation fight. Now, it must deal with banks collapsing
- Indigenous Climate Activists Arrested After ‘Occupying’ US Department of Interior
- Video: Carolina Tribe Fighting Big Poultry Joined Activists Pushing Administration to Act on Climate and Justice
- Jamie Foxx reps say actor was hit in face by a glass at birthday dinner, needed stitches
- Jury to deliver verdict over Brussels extremist attacks that killed 32
- A Climate Progressive Leads a Crowded Democratic Field for Pittsburgh’s 12th Congressional District Seat
- Hannah Montana's Emily Osment Is Engaged to Jack Anthony: See Her Ring
- Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
- 'This is Us' star Mandy Moore says she's received streaming residual checks for 1 penny
Ranking
- Small twin
- Why the Paris Climate Agreement Might be Doomed to Fail
- Baltimore Continues Incinerating Trash, Despite Opposition from its New Mayor and City Council
- The UN’s Top Human Rights Panel Votes to Recognize the Right to a Clean and Sustainable Environment
- Opinion: Gianni Infantino, FIFA sell souls and 2034 World Cup for Saudi Arabia's billions
- Sarah Ferguson, Duchess of York, Shares How Her Breast Cancer Almost Went Undetected
- Judge’s Order Forces Interior Department to Revive Drilling Lease Sales on Federal Lands and Waters
- Pregnant Jana Kramer Reveals Sex of Her and Allan Russell's Baby
Recommendation
Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
Americans snap up AC units, fans as summer temperatures soar higher than ever
Chicago police officer shot in hand, sustains non-life-threatening injury
Racial bias often creeps into home appraisals. Here's what's happening to change that
Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
Louisiana university bars a graduate student from teaching after a profane phone call to a lawmaker
Tyson will close poultry plants in Virginia and Arkansas that employ more than 1,600
Alaska man inadvertently filmed own drowning with GoPro helmet camera — his body is still missing