A NEW study from not-for-profit group Transport & Environment, shows that more than 25 million tonnes of CO2 – equivalent to the total CO2 emissions of Denmark – are exempt from the European Union’s proposed carbon price for shipping.

Arbitrary exemptions of ships such as those servicing oil and gas facilities, as well as yachts, will undermine the EU’s shipping law and let millions of tonnes of emissions off the hook, says T&E.

The EU’s shipping industry emits nearly 130 millions tonnes of CO2 each year, making up roughly 4% of the bloc’s total emissions.

In July 2021 the European Commission proposed a carbon pricing scheme (ETS) for shipping. It only applies to ships above a certain size (5000 GT) and there are a number of exemptions for certain ship types.

Alongside exemptions for fishing and military vessels, ships such as those servicing offshore gas and oil vessels are also excluded.

“This means just over half of Europe’s ships are exempt from the proposal, despite them accounting for nearly 20% of the EU’s shipping emissions – double what the Commission originally claimed the exemption would cover,” the report states.

Jacob Armstrong, sustainable shipping officer at T&E, said, “It’s good that the EU is finally trying to address shipping’s appalling climate impact.

“But its proposal based on arbitrary loopholes lets too many heavily polluting vessels off the hook.

“The EU must rethink its shipping laws to ensure that millions of tonnes of CO2 don’t go unregulated,” he said.

The Commission claims this approach would reduce the administrative burden by cutting down the number of ships that are covered, while still covering the vast majority of emissions.

However, an approach that covers only ships that pollute over a certain amount – rather than based on size – would regulate more emissions without putting an administrative burden on small businesses, says T&E.

T&E recommends a carbon threshold of 1000 tonnes of CO2 per year, which would cover 12% more emissions than the current proposal.

Source: Transport & Environment