Members of BSR’s Clean Cargo Working Group (CCWG) have agreed on a climate action statement and called to action for the container shipping sector and its value chain to support private-sector contributions for the global goals on climate change.
]Today, CCWG includes ocean container shipping lines representing about 85 percent of global volume and more than a dozen key cargo owners. The CCWG member statement reflects an aspiration for container shipping to play its role in limiting global temperature increase to well below 2˚C, acknowledges its part as a low-carbon freight solution and partner in emissions reductions.
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“This represents real leadership by the ocean container shipping sector to define a role for shipping and its partners in the transition to a low-carbon economy,” said Angie Farrag-Thibault, Director of BSR’s Transport and Logistics practice and the Clean Cargo Working Group.
“The agreed member statement is part of a process to raise awareness of the challenge ahead and invite collaborative action to mitigate freight transport emissions through the value chain.”
Following is the full Climate Action Statement and Call to Action as agreed by Members of CCWG at their annual fall meeting in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, n early October. Work performed by BSR to research emissions reductions for the sector and come to agreement on the action statement with CCWG members was funded by the We Mean Business Coalition.
“Climate change is one of the most pressing challenges of our time. Members of the Clean Cargo Working Group support the global climate goal, which affirms the importance of keeping a global temperature increase well below 2°C. Meeting this target will involve deep global greenhouse gas emissions reductions. Ocean shipping is one of the lowest-emission forms of global freight movement, and the members of CCWG have already reduced emissions per TEU-km around 30 percent from 2011-2015. However, we recognize that further industrywide action is required to maintain progress in the transition to low-carbon global logistics supply chains.
We are committed to doing our part, and we cannot do it alone. We need increased ambition, collaboration, and action by carriers, shippers, forwarders, energy and technology providers, and policymakers to enable low-carbon solutions.” Last December, governments representing 196 countries and 98.7 percent of global climaterelated emissions agreed to limit climate change to “well below” 2˚C. Nations have already submitted individual climate plans, but key business sectors, such as shipping, have not yet defined their role in reaching the global climate goal. The International Transport Forum estimates that freight accounts for around 7 percent of global emissions.
As of 2011, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) estimated ocean container shipping produced around 219,945,000 tons of climate-related emissions, equivalent to driving 46 million passenger vehicles for a year, and emissions growth was projected to significantly outpace other shipping segments. The CCWG statement was agreed by members as part of a process to tackle these emissions.
Global shipping stakeholders, such as the International Chamber of Shipping, have recently called for the IMO to set an industry target. BSR research with industry and experts finds that the scale of emissions reductions needed are significantly higher than the 50 percent per tonkilometer that should be achieved well before 2050 using current technology. ”
Source: BSR’s Clean Cargo Working Group