The EU Commission is revising the EU ETS directive in line with the European Green Deal and it plans for the first time to include international maritime emissions. The commission proposal is expected in June.In a letter to the commission, signed by the heads of the Swedish Shipowners’ Association and the Union of Greek Shipowners, the coalition demands that the maritime ETS be both ambitious and tailor-made to the industry. This comes as EU regulators outline the details and the scope of the scheme, which will define how shipping emissions are regulated in the coming years, with regulators in other areas such as China and the US looking to the EU for guidance before possibly also adding shipping into their own ETSs.Faig Abbasov, shipping director at T&E, said: “This is crunch time for the shipping industry. With the EU deciding on the details of its maritime carbon pricing, it is an opportunity to put shipping on a path to decarbonisation. A well-crafted proposal can achieve this without undermining the smooth functioning of the sector. We call on other shipping companies to join this industry-NGO coalition to push for an ambitious and effective proposal.”The ETS should not be limited to voyages within the EU, the letter says, but also cover voyages between the EU and third countries. An intra-EU only ETS would reduce the environmental effectiveness of the measure and place the burden unfairly on short-sea shipping companies.
Source: Splash247 (Click for further of the article)
Source: Splash247 (Click for further of the article)