Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Thursday, October 28 2021 - 03:15
AsiaNet
Global Maritime Forum: Launch of Getting to Zero Coalition Transition Strategy with Concerted Collaborative Action, Full Decarbonization of International Shipping by 2050 Is Doable
LONDON, Oct. 27, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

Today, the Getting to Zero Coalition launched its "Strategy for the Transition 
to Zero-Emission Shipping", a comprehensive study of the actions that 
governments, industry, and international bodies must take to deliver on a 
transition to zero emissions by 2050.

Shipping has undergone transitions in the past and can do so again. The report, 
prepared by University Maritime Advisory Services (UMAS) for the Getting to 
Zero Coalition, demonstrates that this transition is an opportunity to create 
new markets, new technologies and new jobs, alongside wholesale benefits to 
society.

The Strategy is the first major shipping report to bring together transition 
theory with techno-economics. It provides new insights into the essential 
elements of such a transition: the political, technical, economic, and 
commercial requirements, and the actions needed from the sector to deliver on 
them.

"Since 2018, the decarbonization discussion has been dominated by deliberations 
of the industry's fuel choice and the chances of carbon pricing at the IMO. 
This study shows that shipping's decarbonization needs a broader perspective, 
and more attention on the many levers for change that can and should be pulled 
including at the national and regional level," said Dr Tristan Smith, Associate 
Professor at UCL Energy Institute and the lead author of the report.

The report concludes that the fuel pathway is not predetermined but will be 
impacted by the choices of the coming years. However, at this point in 
shipping's transition, the most urgent commercial and policy actions are those 
that can contribute to increase production and use of scalable zero emission 
fuels derived from hydrogen.

"Industry leadership, collaboration and early-stage investment from both the 
private and public sector is critical to kick-start the transition and reduce 
costs and risks. By reaching 5 percent scalable zero-emission fuels in shipping 
by 2030, we can create the tipping point that will allow for a rapid diffusion 
in the following decades. We estimate that about 10 percent of shipping's total 
fuel consumption have promising conditions for transition to zero-emission 
fuels during the 2020's, putting this goal squarely within reach," said Jesse 
Fahnestock, Head of Research and Analysis at the Global Maritime Forum during 
the launch of the Transition Strategy at the Global Maritime Forum's Annual 
Summit in Church House in London.

The report underlines that the transition to full decarbonization by 2050 is 
possible, but all actors need to prepare in their own way. Those countries and 
companies with potential to support and deploy zero emission shipping this 
decade must begin to work together on doing so. Those facing higher barriers to 
action must prepare flexible and robust strategies for the rapid change to 
come. And all parties should work to enable robust action globally through the 
IMO.

"Success does not mean finding a single course of action, rather a series of 
actions by different stakeholders, which can reinforce and complement one 
another to fully decarbonize the sector by 2050," says Margi Van Gogh Head of 
Supply Chain and Transport, World Economic Forum.

The Strategy for the Transition to Zero-Emission Shipping was prepared by UMAS 
for the Getting to Zero Coalition with funding from the Mission Possible 
Partnership (MPP).

About the Getting to Zero Coalition

The Getting to Zero Coalition is an industry-led platform for collaboration 
that brings together leading stakeholders from across the maritime and fuels 
value chains with the financial sector and other committed to making 
commercially viable zero emission vessels a scalable reality by 2030. The 
Getting to Zero Coalition is a partnership between the Global Maritime Forum, 
the Friends of Ocean Action, and the World Economic Forum.

About Global Maritime Forum

The Global Maritime Forum is an international not-for-profit organization 
committed to shaping the future of global seaborne trade to increase 
sustainable long-term economic development and human wellbeing.

About Friends of Ocean Action

Friends of Ocean Action is a unique group of over 55 global leaders from 
business, international organizations, civil society, science and academia who 
are fast-tracking scalable solutions to the most pressing challenges facing the 
ocean. It is hosted by the World Economic Forum in collaboration with the World 
Resources Institute.

About World Economic Forum

The World Economic Forum is the International Organization for Public-Private 
Cooperation. The Forum engages the foremost political, business, cultural and 
other leaders of society to shape global, regional and industry agendas. It was 
established in 1971 as a not-for-profit foundation and is headquartered in 
Geneva, Switzerland. It is independent, impartial and not tied to any special 
interests.

About UMAS

UMAS delivers consultancy services and undertakes research for a wide range of 
clients in the public and private sectors using models of the shipping system, 
shipping big data, and qualitative and social science analysis of the policy 
and commercial structure of the shipping system. UMAS's work is underpinned by 
state-of-the-art data supported by rigorous models and research practices, 
which makes UMAS world-leading on two key areas; using big data to understand 
drivers of shipping emissions and using models to explore shipping's transition 
to a zero emissions future. For more information visit: www.u-mas.co.uk


SOURCE: Global Maritime Forum
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