The proposal aims to accelerate the transition of
the global commercial shipping fleet to net-zero emissions by 2050.
The plan, backed by
shipowners worldwide, proposes mandatory contributions based on each ship’s
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. This initiative could raise billions of dollars
annually to support the maritime GHG reduction efforts, particularly in
developing countries.
The ICS has advocated for economic measures
designed accelerate the uptake of more expensive zero GHG fuels as they become
available. In 2022, IMO member
states rejected a proposal for a $5 billion IMO-supervised program, backed by
the ICS and others, designed to accelerate research and development of
low-carbon and zero-carbon fuels in shipping. The program would have been
financed by a $2 per tonne tax on ship fuel over 10 years.
The updated proposal,
co-sponsored by Bahamas and Liberia (two of the world’s largest flag State
administrations), expands on Japan’s “feebate” concept and the EU States’
support for a flat rate “levy-based” global contribution system. The proposal
also outlines a structure for transparency and accountability of the funds
raised.
ICS Secretary General
Guy Platten underscored the importance of global involvement in the transition
to net-zero shipping.
The proposal will be
reviewed by IMO Member States in their next round of GHG negotiations in March.
Governments have already committed to developing a GHG pricing mechanism for
international shipping by 2025. If approved, the ZESF will be instrumental in
achieving net-zero GHG emissions from shipping by or close to 2050.
The proposal also suggests using contributions from
ships per tonne of CO2e emitted to reduce the cost gap between zero GHG fuels
and conventional fuel oil. This approach would provide financial rewards (“feebates”) to ships for
the GHG emissions they prevent by using these new marine fuels.
The proposal includes
support for the production of zero/near-zero marine fuels, development of new
bunkering infrastructure in developing countries’ ports worldwide, and training
in the safe use of new fuels.
An impact assessment
conducted by Clarksons Research for ICS concluded that a contribution rate
adding a cost between US$20 to $300 per tonne of fuel oil consumed would have
no disproportionately negative impacts on national economies in terms of
delivered cargo prices.
The Zero Emission Shipping Fund aims to support the
shipping sector, currently heavily reliant on fossil fuels, in achieving a
“take-off” point in its use of more
expensive ‘green’ fuels like ammonia, hydrogen, sustainable biofuels, synthetic
methanol, and synthetic LNG.
Tags: IMO, NetZero, Shipping Industry, ZESF