UN shipping agency strikes deal on fuel emissions, pollution fees

UN shipping agency strikes deal on fuel emissions, pollution fees


A cargo ship sits outside of the Port of Elizabeth marine terminal seen from Bayonne, New Jersey, U.S., April 9 2025. 

Shannon Stapleton | Reuters

Countries at the U.N. shipping agency struck a deal on Friday on a global fuel emissions standard for the maritime sector, which will impose an emissions fee on ships that breach it and reward vessels burning cleaner fuels.

The U.S. pulled out of the climate talks at the International Maritime Organization in London this week, urging other countries to do the same and threatening to impose “reciprocal measures” against any fees charged to U.S. ships.

Despite that, other nations approved the CO2-cutting measures to help meet the IMO’s target to cut net emissions from international shipping by 20% by 2030 and eliminate them by 2050.

A majority of countries at the IMO voted on Friday to approve a scheme that will set two emissions limits from 2028 – one main limit that all ships are expected to meet and a second stricter emissions limit.

Ships that reduce emissions to below this stricter limit will be rewarded.

Although agreement was reached, the climate talks exposed deep rifts between governments over how fast to push the maritime sector to cut its environmental impact.

A proposal for a stronger carbon levy, backed by the European Union and Pacific nations, was dropped after opposition from countries including China, Brazil and Saudi Arabia, delegates told Reuters.

Under the agreement, if ships emit more than the first limit, they will face a penalty of $380 per metric ton on every extra ton of CO2 equivalent they emit.

Ships will face a lower penalty of $100 a ton on emissions that exceed the stricter limit but are still below the main emissions limit.

For example, in 2030 the main emissions limit will require ships to cut the emissions intensity of their fuel by 8% compared with a 2008 baseline while the stricter standard will demand a 21% reduction. By 2035, the main standard will cut fuel emissions by 30%, versus 43% for the stricter standard.

Ships that more than comply with the stricter emissions standard will receive credits that they can sell to non-compliant vessels.

Nations including Saudi Arabia, Russia and Iran requested a vote on the CO2-cutting measures – an unusual move at the IMO, where decisions are usually taken by consensus without a vote.

Countries still need to give final approval to the measure at a meeting in October, before it can take effect in 2028.



Source

How China’s ‘unruly’ speculators might be fueling the frenzy in gold market
World

How China’s ‘unruly’ speculators might be fueling the frenzy in gold market

Gold and silver prices rose as U.S. Treasury bond yields fell after December retail sales growth stalled, signaling a softening economy ahead of key jobs data. Bloomberg Creative | Bloomberg Creative Photos | Getty Images Gold’s wild price swings in recent weeks are increasingly being linked to speculative trading in China by some analysts, with […]

Read More
These four charts show how reliant Europe is on U.S. digital infrastructure
World

These four charts show how reliant Europe is on U.S. digital infrastructure

As geopolitical tensions between the EU and the U.S. escalate, these charts show how reliant the continent is on American tech providers, despite pledges to become more independent. Since returning to the White House last year, U.S President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on the continent and caused headaches and fear in Europe as he initially […]

Read More
European stocks head for mixed open after latest AI Wall Street sell-off
World

European stocks head for mixed open after latest AI Wall Street sell-off

FILE PHOTO: Bull and bear symbols for successful and bad trading are seen in front of the German stock exchange (Deutsche Boerse) in Frankfurt, Germany, February 12, 2019. Kai Pfaffenbach | Reuters European shares look set to open in mixed territory on Friday, after AI fears triggered another sell-off on Wall Street overnight. Futures tied […]

Read More