Major nations impose first global carbon tax on shipping emissions
- On April 1, 2025, a container ship approached the port of Santos in Brazil.
- International Maritime Organization member states are working to regulate maritime greenhouse gas emissions.
- The IMO committee is considering regulations to price emissions and set fuel standards.
- IMO Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez stated the measures are more than aspirations and will become mandatory.
- If an agreement is reached, it would represent solidarity in tackling climate change, but an agreement is uncertain.
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112 Articles
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The UN approved the first global carbon tax yesterday, which would require all ships worldwide to use a less carbon-intensive fuel mix or else pay for excess emissions from 2028. It is the start of the UN raising its own funds through taxes rather than being reliant on contributions from national governments. Yesterday, the United
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Negotiators in London agreed for the first time on a framework that will require ships to switch away from fossil fuels, but the rules as they stand will lead to a massive increase in deforestation-driving biofuels Negotiators at the UN’s shipping body (IMO) managed to clinch a deal that might ... [continued] The post UN Shipping Agreement A Victory For Multilateralism But A Failure For The Climate appeared first on CleanTechnica.
International shipping authority agrees to first ever global emissions fee
Countries reached a landmark agreement to curb emissions from global shipping, which contributes about 3% of global greenhouse gases. Under the deal, negotiated by the UN's International Maritime Organization, ships must reduce emissions or pay a fee, with the goal of achieving net-zero by around 2050. The accord, set to take effect by 2028 pending final approval, introduces the first-ever global carbon price for an industry while funding cleane…
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