Following the announcement of global retail giants to move their products off of fossil-fueled maritime cargo ships by 2040, Ship It Zero coalition says the commitment is too weak to address the urgent climate crisis.
In fact, environmental groups Pacific Environment and Stand.earth, which lead the Ship It Zero campaign and its 20,000 supporters, are calling on major retail brands to become leaders in their sector by taking immediate action to reduce their climate and health-harming maritime pollution and switching entirely to zero-emissions ships by 2030 — a decade earlier than today’s commitment.
As explained, this earlier goal will ensure the shipping industry does its fair share to keep global warming under 1.5 degrees Celsius, the target scientists say is needed to avoid the worst consequences of the climate crisis.
“We are thrilled by the historic commitment from Amazon, IKEA and other major goods owners to move their products off of fossil fueled cargo ships, but it does not go far enough. We’re asking Big Retail to be first movers in shipping’s clean energy transition — not just float along — which means a 2040 target date is not sufficient. We’re shocked to see that Walmart, the single-largest maritime importer to the United States, did not join today’s commitment. Where are Walmart, Target, Home Depot, Lowes, and many leading maritime importers as documented in our Shady Ships report?”…said Madeline Rose, Climate Campaign Director, Pacific Environment.
The Ship It Zero coalition applauds certain details of the announcement, including that:
- Companies will define zero-carbon fuels based on “lifecycle greenhouse gas” analysis, ensuring that fossil-derived hydrogen will not meet their criteria
- Companies will not consider fossil gas, or “Liquified Natural Gas,” a zero-carbon fuel in their ocean shipping transitions
- Companies are calling in this statement for mandatory policy actions from government to help them achieve these ambitions
“Today’s pledge is an important guidepost for the future of maritime shipping, but 2040 is simply too distant a horizon for the retail sector to address the enormous health and climate impacts from its cargo ships. If major retail brands truly want to do their fair share on climate change, they need to be on a course correction now, not 19 years from now. Cleaner shipping solutions already exist, and major retail brands like Amazon and IKEA must champion them,” …said Kendra Ulrich, Shipping Campaigns Director, Stand.earth.
This Ship It Zero coalition is concerned, however, that:
- Companies did not specify actions they will take to end ship pollution today, tomorrow, or throughout our most decisive decade on climate action.
- Companies largely committed to addressing climate pollution and do not include parallel commitments to ending air pollution from ocean shipping, including sulfur oxide, nitrous oxide, and particulate matter pollution.
For the records, Ship It Zero is a coalition of environmental and public health advocates, scientists, shipping experts, and shoppers, urging some of the largest companies in the world to achieve zero-emissions shipping by 2030.
While we thank Amazon, IKEA, Patagonia, and other retailers for making a historic commitment to zero-emissions ocean cargo shipping, this commitment does not address our current port pollution crisis. Right now, due to COVID-19 and holiday-related trends, an unprecedented number of fossil-fueled cargo container ships await entry into ports, harming frontline communities and our climate with deadly air pollution and greenhouse gases. We need companies to take accountability now — by committing to 100% zero-emissions ocean cargo shipping this decade,”
….said Dawny’all Heydari, Ship It Zero Campaign Lead, Pacific Environment.