WSC’s plan to make green fuels ‘competitive’ with fossil fuels put on the table

Transition

The World Shipping Council (WSC) has further developed its Green Balance Mechanism, a regulatory measure designed to ensure that shipping meets its net-zero goal by 2050 in an efficient, just and equitable way.

Illustration. Courtesy of Navingo

As informed, a detailed proposal, including design updates and regulatory text for the Green Balance Mechanism, has been submitted to support the timely development of effective climate regulations for shipping at the International Maritime Organization’s (IMO) ISWG-GHG 17 and MEPC 82 meetings.

Ocean carriers continue to invest in the decarbonization of their fleets. Ships designed to operate on green fuels are already on the water, and over 60% of new container and vehicle carrier vessels for delivery by 2030 will be ready to use the greenest fuels.

However, these fuels are scarce and several times more expensive than fossil fuels.

According to the WSC, the Green Balance Mechanism aims to bridge this price gap, making green fuels competitive with fossil fuels.

Fully integrated with a technical fuel standard, the Green Balance Mechanism allocates funds collected from higher greenhouse gas (GHG)-intensity fuels to lower GHG-intensity fuels, allowing carriers to operate competitively on green fuels.

“For shipping’s energy transition to take place, green maritime fuels must be available at scale, requiring billion-dollar investments by energy producers. For these investments to occur, the IMO must adopt regulations that not only increase fossil fuel prices but also make green fuels a viable alternative. Only then will there be a strong enough market for green maritime fuels to stimulate the necessary levels of investment in green fuel production and renewable energy,” said Joe Kramek, President & CEO of the WSC.

How the Green Balance Mechanism works

The Green Balance Mechanism is fully integrated with a greenhouse gas fuel-intensity standard. The mechanism applies a fee to fossil fuels and then allocates the funds to green fuels so that the average cost of fuel is roughly equal.

Specifically, the fee and allocation of funds are calculated each year, based on the amount of green fuel use and market prices, balancing out the cost across very different fuels.

This is expected to boost the uptake of the greenest fuels, delivering greenhouse gas reductions. At the same time, all fuels that deliver greenhouse gas reductions above the standards established in the Green Balance Mechanism will receive some allocation, proportional to their greenhouse gas emission reduction, according to WSC.

The emissions reductions required for a fuel to receive an allocation would follow the IMO commitments to decarbonization over time, starting at a reduction of 65% compared to fossil fuels and increasing in stringency to reach the 2050 net-zero goal.

The Green Balance Mechanism includes a framework to create a parallel ‘IMO Net-Zero Fund’ to raise funds for Research, Development & Demonstration projects and climate mitigation initiatives, to provide a just and equitable transition.

“IMO member states have a unique opportunity to decarbonise the world’s ocean supply chains. We do not have time for half measures. The IMO’s regulations must make it possible for green fuels to compete with fossil fuels, to drive the transition effectively. Anything less risks raising transportation costs without achieving the climate progress the world needs,” Kramek concluded.

To remind, WSC recently called on the European Union to design policy frameworks that facilitate the essential role of shipping in a globally connected economy and support shipping’s green transition.

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