Pressure On IMO Member States To Agree On Global Fuel Standard
London, 2 April 2025: After International Maritime Organization (IMO) member states failed to reach agreement on a draft legal text during this week’s two-day meeting - a text that would have been due for approval during next week’s MEPC 83, the Clean Shipping Coalition called on governments to commit to a fuel standard and greenhouse gas pricing mechanism for the shipping industry that would lower emission reductions. Negotiations are expected to continue this week and into next week’s meeting.
“There has never been more pressure on IMO
member states to agree to a fuel standard and GHG pricing
mechanism that will sufficiently drive GHG emission
reductions and ensure a just and equitable maritime energy
transition”, said Delaine McCullough, Ocean
Conservancy’s Shipping Emissions Policy Manager
and President of the Clean
Shipping Coalition. “There is still majority
support for a high, flat GHG price on all emissions from
ships combined with an ambition fuel standard, but it must
hold through these coming days of debate. At the same time,
the negotiations that began today on the strengthening of
the IMO’s energy efficiency measure, the Carbon Intensity
Indicator, are even more critical than ever. Improved energy
efficiency is the key to immediate and ongoing emission
reductions–it’s shipping decarbonization’s
superpower–so the CII must be up to the
task.”
- ISWG-GHG-19 (Intersessional Working Group on Reduction of GHG Emissions), ran from March 31- April 11, and focussed on reaching agreement on a global fuel standard and greenhouse gas levy.
- Starting today April 2nd, three-day ISWG-APEE 1 (Intersessional Working Group on Air Pollution and Energy Efficiency) will aim to revise and improve the functioning of the IMO’s carbon intensity indicator (CII).
- Next week’s MEPC 83 (April 7-11) - the IMO’s Marine Environment Protect Committee - is scheduled to approve legal text on each of the three. What they approve during MEPC 83 will then be adopted (the final stage) at an extraordinary session of MEPC in October 2025.
See also:
Op-Ed: Three GHG Meetings in London Can Transform Shipping
Press release: London Shipping Summit Must Slash Industry Contribution to Climate Crisis