The push for a global levy on international shipping emissions won additional support from another dozen countries during talks in London this week, but it is still opposed by a group of large emerging economies including Brazil, China and Saudi Arabia. The negotiations made little concrete progress, leaving much work ahead of a crunch meeting in April, according to observers.
More than 60 countries – including European Union member states, the UK, Japan, Nigeria and Kenya – have now swung behind the proposal, championed by Pacific island nations, to tax pollution from ships to reduce the sector’s planet-warning emissions and generate revenue for climate action. New backers include Malawi, Mexico, Namibia, New Zealand, Senegal, Switzerland and Türkiye.
But a group of 12 countries such as Brazil, China, Indonesia, Saudi Arabia and South Africa argue that a levy would hit developing nations the hardest and risk exacerbating food insecurity by increasing the cost of maritime trade.
Christiaan De Beukelaer, a senior lecturer at the University of Melbourne, noted that countries accounting for at least two-thirds of fossil fuel subsidies continue to stand in the way of a shipping levy.
“This includes Brazil, who is touting to be a leader in hosting this year’s [COP30] climate summit, yet just joined OPEC+, a group of major oil-exporting nations. These fossil fuel incumbents should not be allowed to block urgent climate action in the shipping industry,” he said.
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Slow progress
A week of talks ended at the International Maritime Organisation (IMO) in London on Friday with little concrete progress on if and how a levy should be adopted, while all options to accelerate emissions cuts by incentivising energy efficiency and deploying cleaner fuels and energy sources such as wind power still on the table.
“English porridge and Caribbean coffee during the week-long IMO negotiation was good, but we are running out of time to get our act together,” Faig Abbasov, shipping director at NGO Transport & Environment, told Climate Home News. “The dirty ship hasn’t moved an inch yet.”
Experts at the UCL Energy Institute, however, gave a more favourable view, reporting that the talks saw further “tidying up” of options and draft language for a potential agreement, and expressing the view that the process is on track to make key decisions in April.
Annika Frosch, research fellow at the institute, noted that support for a levy continues to grow, now grouping two-thirds of signatories to a key maritime treaty to prevent pollution from ships in “a diverse coalition” with key vessel flag states, including African nations, Small Island Developing States (SIDS), and Least Developed Countries (LDCs).
Plan for emissions controls by 2027
International shipping accounts for around 3% of global emissions. Countries have already agreed to cut shipping emissions by at least 20% from 2008 levels by 2030, at least 70% by 2040 and to reach net zero emissions around 2050.
Ambassador Albon Ishoda, the Marshall Islands’ special envoy for maritime decarbonisation, said that without a universal levy, the IMO’s climate targets would be meaningless. “This is the fastest, most effective, and lowest-cost way to ensure a just and equitable transition, where no one is left behind. Delays cost lives. The time for action is now,” he added.
The IMO wants to have carbon-cutting measures in place by 2027 – a timeline that would require countries to adopt new rules at key talks in October. The negotiations are set to resume in April, when an agreement is needed for countries to meet the October deadline.
The levy under discussion would force ship owners to pay for every tonne of greenhouse gases their vessels emit, making the use of more polluting fuels – like today’s oil-based bunker fuel – more expensive. Proponents argue this would incentivise the sector’s energy transition and provide the funding needed to ensure it is equitable and keeps costs as low as possible.
But in a submission to the IMO before this week’s talks, the group of opposing countries said “a levy would not deliver a just and equitable transition” and its adoption “may trigger negative, economy-wide impacts”. They argue the tax could reduce exports from developing countries, increase economic inequalities and impact food prices in low-income countries.
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Despite this warning, some of the world’s poorest and most climate-vulnerable countries, such as Liberia, for example, have joined the supporters of an emissions levy.
Delaine McCullough, the Ocean Conservancy’s shipping emissions policy manager and president of the Clean Shipping Coalition, described the new voices calling for the levy at the IMO this week as “one of the bright spots”.
“It was particularly encouraging to see Mexico and Panama act as regional leaders in this crucial discussion – we now need a rallying call by IMO member states to agree on strong global fuel standard and greenhouse gas levy as the best way forward for reducing emissions from the shipping sector,” she added in a statement.
Views differ on levy structure and use
The levy’s proponents are not yet all on the same page – there are still differing views on how much the levy should be and what the proceeds should be spent on. Analysts say these key points could be divisive if the principle of a levy is agreed at the talks.
Advocates of the levy have suggested a wide range of prices – from $18 to $150 per tonne of carbon dioxide emitted – with Pacific island nations backing the highest rate.
Equally, there are disagreements over whether the revenue should be used solely to accelerate the shipping sector’s transition to clean energy sources or to support climate action more broadly. Priority for low-income and climate-vulnerable countries is also up for discussion.
The UCL Energy Institute said, however, that there is broad support for a fund to help achieve a just transition and cushion the impacts of a global shift to greener shipping.
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In an attempt to bridge the broader divides, Singapore has suggested expanding proposals for a fuel standard so that ship owners would pay for emissions above a certain level. Under this proposal, ship owners would be required to keep emissions below two thresholds and incur lower penalties if they breach the most ambitious one. But it is unclear if the idea will win countries’ support.
Also notably absent from the talks has been any discussion on what should be permitted as a clean fuel – another highly contentious issue. “We should be especially vigilant as to how much space will be given to biofuels so that the cure isn’t worse than the disease,” said Abbasov of Transport & Environment.
The post Global tax on shipping emissions faces choppy waters despite growing support appeared first on Climate Home News.
Global tax on shipping emissions faces choppy waters despite growing support
Climate Change
Equity, Benefit-Sharing and Financial Architecture in the International Seabed Area
A new independent study by Dr Harvey Mpoto Bombaka (Centro Universitário de Brasília) and Dr Ben Tippet (King’s College London), commissioned by Greenpeace International, reveals that current International Seabed Authority revenue-sharing proposals would return virtually nothing to developing countries — despite the requirement under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) that deep sea mining must benefit humankind as a whole.
Instead, the analysis shows that the overwhelming economic value would flow to a handful of private corporations, primarily headquartered in the Global North.
Download the report:
Equity, Benefit-Sharing and Financial Architecture in the International Seabed Area
Executive Summary: Equity, Benefit-Sharing and Financial Architecture in the International Seabed Area
https://www.greenpeace.org.au/greenpeace-reports/equity-benefit-sharing-and-financial-architecture-in-the-international-seabed-area/
Climate Change
Pacific nations would be paid only thousands for deep sea mining, while mining companies set to make billions, new research reveals
SYDNEY/FIJI, Thursday 26 February 2026 — New independent research commissioned by Greenpeace International has revealed that Pacific Island states would receive mere thousands of dollars in payment from deep sea mining per year, placing the region as one of the most affected but worst-off beneficiaries in the world.
The research by legal professor Dr Harvey Mpoto Bombaka and development economist Dr Ben Tippet reveals that mechanisms proposed by the International Seabed Authority (ISA) for sharing any future revenues from deep sea mining would leave developing nations with meagre, token payments. Pacific Island nations would receive only USD $46,000 per year in the short term, then USD $241,000 per year in the medium term, averaging out to barely USD $382,000 per year for 28 years – an entire annual income for a nation that is less than some individual CEOs’ salaries. Mining companies would rake in over USD $13.5 billion per year, taking up to 98% of the revenues.
The analysis shows that under a scenario where six deep sea mining sites begin operating in the early 2030s, the revenues that states would actually receive are extraordinarily small. This is in contrast to the clear mandate of the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS), which requires mining to be carried out for the benefit of humankind as a whole.[1] The real beneficiaries, the research shows, would be, yet again, a handful of corporations in the Global North.
Head of Pacific at Greenpeace Australia Pacific Shiva Gounden, said:
“What the Pacific is being promised amounts to little more than scraps. The people of the Pacific would sacrifice the most and receive the least if deep sea mining goes ahead. We are being asked to trade in our spiritual and cultural connection to our oceans, and risk our livelihoods and food sources, for almost nothing in return.
“The deep sea mining industry has manipulated the Pacific and has lied to our people for too long, promising prosperity and jobs that simply do not exist. The wealthy CEOs and deep sea mining companies will pocket the cash while the people of the Pacific see no material benefits. The Pacific will not benefit from deep sea mining, and our sacrifice is too big to allow it to go ahead. The Pacific Ocean is not a commodity, and it is not for sale.”
Using proposals submitted by the ISA’s Finance Committee between 2022 and 2025, the returns to states barely register in national accounts. After administrative costs, institutional expenses, and compensation funds are deducted, little, if anything, remains to distribute [3].
Author Dr Harvey Mpoto Bombaka of the Centro Universitário de Brasília said:
“What’s described as global benefit-sharing based on equity and intergenerational justice increasingly looks like a framework for managing scarcity that would deliver almost no real benefits to anyone other than the deep sea mining industry. The structural limitations of the proposed mechanism would offer little more than symbolic returns to the rest of the world, particularly developing countries lacking technological and financial capacity.”
The ISA will meet in March for its first session of the year. Currently, 40 countries back a moratorium or precautionary pause on deep sea mining.
Gounden added: “The deep sea belongs to all humankind, and our people take great pride in being the custodians of our Pacific Ocean. Protecting this with everything we have is not only fair and responsible but what we see as our ancestral duty. The only equitable path is to leave the minerals where they are and stop deep sea mining before it starts.
“The decision on the future of the ocean must be a process that centres the rights and voices of Pacific communities as the traditional custodians. Clearly, deep sea mining will not benefit the Pacific, and the only sensible way forward is a moratorium.”
—ENDS—
Notes
[1] A key condition for governments to permit deep sea mining to start in the international seabed is that it ‘be carried out for the benefit of mankind as a whole’, particularly developing nations, according to international law (Article 136-140, 148, 150, and 160(2)(g), the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea).
For more information or to arrange an interview, please contact Kimberley Bernard on +61407 581 404 or kbernard@greenpeace.org
Climate Change
North Carolina Regulators Nix $1.2 Billion Federal Proposal to Dredge Wilmington Harbor
U.S. Army Corps of Engineers failed to explain how it would mitigate environmental harms, including PFAS contamination.
The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers can’t dredge 28 miles of the Wilmington Harbor as planned, after North Carolina environmental regulators determined the billion-dollar proposal would be inconsistent with the state’s coastal management policies.
North Carolina Regulators Nix $1.2 Billion Federal Proposal to Dredge Wilmington Harbor
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