7 Feb 2024

EU 2040 climate targets point to the importance of providing renewable marine fuels for maritime sector decarbonisation.

Committing the EU to the production of zero-GHG fuel pathways is essential, not least because European Member States account for one-fifth of global shipping energy sales.

Zero-GHG fuels

Meeting 2040 goals must lead to new energy production facilities to supply the maritime sector with zero-GHG fuels, which will demand substantial financial investment.

Additionally, the rollout of infrastructure to support the adoption and distribution of these alternative fuels across the sector is crucial.

International agreements

The liner sector is already investing in vessel technologies to use renewable marine fuels"

EU policymakers need to translate these regional goals into increased national commitments to produce the fuels required by EU regulations like FuelEU Maritime,” says James Corbett, WSC Environmental Director, Europe.

The liner sector is already investing in the vessel technologies to use renewable marine fuels, and global decarbonisation for all of the shipping depends upon EU leadership in reaching international agreement at the IMO MEPC.”

Greenhouse gas pricing mechanism

Reaching an agreement on a Global Fuel Standard and the establishment of a greenhouse gas pricing mechanism at the IMO level requires European leadership beyond regional 2040 climate targets.

Such measures are critical for creating a consistent and fair framework for the global shipping industry to innovate and invest in zero-emission solutions.

Conducive policy frameworks

WSC urges the European Commission and international partners to develop the targets into a clear plan for the scale of investment and regulatory support needed to facilitate this transition.

Only through coordinated global action and the establishment of conducive policy frameworks can we ensure the maritime industry's successful move towards a zero-greenhouse gas future, in alignment with our shared climate objectives.