Category: Decarbonisation

  • By Kelvin Anthony, RNZ Pacific lead digital and social media journalist

    Pacific island countries’ “relentless” efforts at the UN’s specialist agency on shipping, International Maritime Organisation (IMO), has resulted in the adoption of a new emissions reductions strategy to ensure the Paris Agreement goal remains within reach.

    The IMO’s 80th Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC80) was under pressure to deliver an outcome to reduce the global maritime transportation industry’s carbon footprint and to steer the sector towards a viable climate path that is 1.5 degrees-aligned.

    It was a political compromise after two weeks of intense politicking that got member states through to settle on the 2023 IMO Greenhouse Gas Strategy on Friday, just as hopes were fading of any meaningful outcome from the negotiations at the IMO’s climate talks in London.

    The Pacific collective from the Marshall Islands, Fiji, Kiribati, Tuvalu, Tonga and Solomon Islands, who have been at the IMO since 2015 joined by Vanuatu, Nauru, Samoa and Nauru — referred to as the 6PAC Plus — overcame strong resistance to ensure international shipping continues to steam towards full decarbonisation by 2050.

    Vanuatu’s Climate Change Minister Ralph Regevanu, who attended the IMO meeting for the first time, said: “This outcome is far from perfect, but countries across the world came together and got it done — and it gives us a shot at 1.5 degrees.”

    Some of the Pacific negotiators at the International Maritime Organisation. 7 July 2023
    Some of the Pacific negotiators at the International Maritime Organisation. Image: Kelvin Anthony/RNZ

    Pacific nations were advocating for global shipping to reach zero emissions by 2050 consistent with the science-based targets.

    They had proposed absolute emissions cuts from the sector of at least 37 percent by 2030 and 96 percent by 2040 for the industry, to ensure the IMO is not out of step on climate change.

    Countries came up short
    But countries came up short, instead agreeing that to “reach net-zero GHG emissions from international shipping” a reduction of at least 20 percent by 2030, striving for 30 percent, and at least 70 percent by 2040, striving for 80 percent compared to 2008, “by or around 2050”, was sufficient to set them on the right trajectory.

    While there were concerns that targets were not ambitious, they were accepted as better than what nations had decided on in an earlier revised draft text on Thursday, when they agreed for only 20 percent by 2030, with the upper limit of 25 percent, and at least 70 percent by 2040, striving for 75.

    “These higher targets are the result of relentless, unceasing lobbying by ambitious Pacific islands, against the odds,” Marshall Islands special presidential envoy for the decarbonisation of maritime shipping, Albon Ishoda said.

    ​​”If we are to have any hope of saving our beautiful Blue Planet, and building a truly ecological civilisation, the climate vulnerable needs our voices to be heard and we are confident that they have been heard today.”

    Tuvalu's Minister for Transport, Energy and Tourism, Nielu Mesake
    Tuvalu’s Minister for Transport, Energy and Tourism Nielu Mesake . . . disappointed over “a strategy that falls short of what we need – but we are realistic.” Image: Kelvin Anthony/RNZ Pacific

    Tuvalu’s Minister for Transport, Energy and Tourism, Nielu Mesake, said he was “very disappointed” to have “a strategy that falls short of what we need”.

    “But we are also realistic and understand that to reach any chance of setting this critical sector in the right direction we needed to compromise,” Mesake said.

    He said Tuvalu was confident in the shipping industry’s ability to change.

    “We have seen it before. We are confident that our industry will now prioritise each effort and each capital into decarbonizing [and] see shipping stepping up to the plate and fulfil its responsibility to reduce emissions.”

    Ishoda said the IMO’s focus now was to deliver on the targets.

    “We look forward to swift agreement on a just and equitable economic measure to price shipping emissions and bend the emissions curve fast enough to keep 1.5 alive.”

    More work ahead
    IMO chief Kitck Lim said the adoption of the strategy was a “monumental development” but it was only “a starting point for the work that needs to intensify even more over the years and decades ahead of us.”

    “However, with the Revised Strategy that you have now agreed on, we have a clear direction, a common vision, and ambitious targets to guide us to deliver what the world expects from us,” Lim said.

    And Pacific nations are under no illusion of the task ahead for international shipping truly to truly meet the 1.5 degrees limit.

    Fiji’s Minister for Transport Ro Filipe Tuisawau said: “We know that we have much more work to do now to adopt a universal GHG levy and global fuel standards urgently.

    “These are tools which will actually reduce emissions. We also look forward to the utilisation of viable alternative fuels,” Tuisawau said.

    Kiribati Minister for Information, Communication and Transport Tekeeua Tarati said the process of arriving at the final outcome “has been an extremely challenging and distressing negotiation for all parties involved.”

    “We had hoped for a revised strategy that was completely aligned to 1.5 degrees, not a strategy that merely keeps it within reach,” Tarati said.

    “We need to work on the measures that are essential to achieve the emissions reductions we so desperately need.”

    Member States adopt the 2023 IMO Greenhouse Gas Strategy in London. 7 July 2023
    Member states adopt the 2023 IMO Greenhouse Gas Strategy in London on 7 July 2023. Image: IMO/RNZ Pacific

    Carbon levy on the table

    The calls for a GHG levy for pollution from ships also made it through as an option under the basket of candidate mid-term GHG reduction measures, work on which will be ongoing in future IMO forums.

    While the word “levy” is not mentioned, the strategy states an economic measure should be developed “on the basis of maritime GHG emissions pricing mechanism”.

    “A GHG levy, starting at $100/tonne, is the only way to keep it there. Ultimately it’s not the targets but the incentives we put in place to meet them. So we in the Pacific are going to keep up a strong fight for a levy that gets us to zero emissions by 2050.”

    Ishoda said a universal GHG levy “is the most effective, the most efficient, and the most equitable economic measure to accelerate the decarbonisation of international shipping.”

    But he acknowledged more needed to be done.

    “There is much work to do to ensure that 1.5 remains not just within reach, but it’s achieved in reality.”

    ‘Wish and prayer agreement’
    But shipping and climate campaigners say the plan is not good enough.

    According to the Clean Shipping Coalition, the target agreed to in the final strategy was weak and “is far short of what is needed to be sure of keeping global heating below 1.5 degrees.”

    “There is no excuse for this wish and a prayer agreement,” the group’s president, John Maggs, said.

    Maggs said the member states had known halving emissions by the end of the decade “was both possible and affordable”.

    “The most vulnerable put up an admirable fight for high ambition and significantly improved the agreement but we are still a long way from the IMO treating the climate crisis with the urgency that it deserves and that the public demands.”

    University College London’s shipping expert Dr Tristan Smith said outcome of IMO’s climate talks “owes so much to the leadership of a small number of climate vulnerable countries – to their determination and perseverance in convincing much larger economies to act more ambitiously”.

    “That this still does not do enough to ensure the survival of the vulnerable countries, in spite of what they have given to help secure the sustainability of global trade, is why more is needed, and all the more reason to give them the credit for what they have done and to heed their calls for a GHG levy,” Dr Smith added.

    This post was originally published on Asia Pacific Report.

  • Kohei Saito argues there are five important reasons why we need to move beyond capitalism to deal with the ecological and social crises besetting the world today. Peter Boyle reports.

    This post was originally published on Green Left.

  • Grants of up to $5 million are now available for research and development projects in renewable hydrogen and low emissions iron and steel through the Australian Renewable Energy Agency. With a total pool of $50 million available, the programs seek to support the development of “core research into early-stage commercialisation activities”, according to the program…

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  • A Greens proposal to establish a National Energy Transition Authority has been shot down by a Senate committee report, although an alternative coordinating body for the transition to renewable energy is still being considered. Both the Economics Legislation Committee and the Greens dissenting reports, released on Friday, acknowledged the popular support and need to establish…

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  • Two hydrogen projects in New South Wales will share in $64 million in support from the state government, with the announcement coming three weeks out from the next election. At the same time, the state government has announced the opening of $1.5 billion in electricity concessions for large-scale green hydrogen producers. Both programs were committed…

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  • Greater support for greenhouse gas removal research and technology is needed to meet the urgency of tackling global warming, according to a new report from the Australian Academy of Science. This includes novel technologies such as direct air capture and directly splitting CO2 into elemental carbon, as well as deploying existing carbon capture, utilisation, and…

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  • A green hydrogen and ammonia production joint venture between the Port of Newcastle, Macquarie Capital, and Macquarie’s Green Investment Group has been cancelled, releasing a $41 million federal grant commitment. The stage one 40MW electrolyser and accompanying ammonia production plant, dubbed H2Newcastle, was deemed “technically feasible but not commercially viable” according to a Port of…

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  • Australia will need to invest more than $20 billion into industry abatement technology and the national energy system each year for the next 30 years, according to a report by the Australian Industry Energy Transitions Initiative. The total investment is estimated at $625 billion by 2050, which is around $225 billion above the business-as-usual level…

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  • National Energy Resources Australia is the first Industry Growth Centre to announce it will shut down after federal funding is discontinued in July. In its seven years of operation, National Energy Resources Australia (NERA) used its $15.6 million project fund to generate $45 million investment in 60 projects. The growth centre for oil, gas, and…

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  • The Greens will seek changes to enabling legislation for the National Reconstruction Fund to prevent it from becoming a $15 billion “slush fund for fossil fuel finance”. Seizing on an opportunity created by the Coalition’s decision to oppose the National Reconstruction Fund (NRF) Corporation Bill, the Greens plan to move amendments to prohibit the fund…

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  • The national Hydrogen Strategy should be refreshed to increase support for a value-added hydrogen sector, according to former chief scientist Alan Finkel, who led the development of the existing strategy released three years ago. Dr Finkel told the inaugural Australian Hydrogen Research Conference on Wednesday that overseas hydrogen production incentives, such as the $369 billion…

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  • Natural seawater could feasibly be an “almost infinite” feedstock for green hydrogen following a research breakthrough led by scientists at the University of Adelaide. The team used a catalyst coating which allows hydrogen to be extracted from seawater using existing commercial electrolysers. They are now working to scale the system to use in “commercial processes…

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  • Four of New South Wales’ highest emitting manufacturers have been awarded almost $1 million in grants to accelerate the deployment of GreenTech and other decarbonisation projects. Chemical manufacturer Orica, cement producer Boral, starch manufacturer Manildra Group and Tomago Aluminium were announced as the funding recipients on Thursday. Funded through the $305 million Net Zero Industry…

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  • The federal government is continuing to back green hydrogen exports, signing a new memorandum of understanding signed with the Dutch government on Monday. Climate Change and Energy minister Chris Bowen signed a memorandum of understanding with the Netherlands’ Climate and Energy minister Rob Jetten to promote clean energy green hydrogen supply chains between the two…

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  • A two-year Australian-German report has urged both governments to take “decisive early action” to enable green hydrogen exports at scale, noting that shipping hydrogen derivatives provides “an early path for international renewable hydrogen trade”. The hydrogen supply chain feasibility project, HySupply, launched at the end of 2020 as a collaboration between Australian and German researchers….

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  • Fortescue will manufacture electrolysers developed in-house at its $114 million production facility being developed in Gladstone following the collapse of its partnership with US-based supplier Plug Power. Although Plug Power Electrolysers will not be produced from the facility, they may still be supplied to other Fortescue projects, according to Fortescue Future Industries (FFI) chief executive…

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  • Petrol retailer Ampol has partnered with Australian commercial electric vehicle manufacturer SEA Electric to develop a network of charging stations. Charging stations targeted at SEA Electric customers will be developed at Ampol petrol stations, “at destinations and solutions at the workplace”. Ampol has described the partnership to develop “flexible, sustainable and seamless charging options to…

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  • A tighter limit on greenhouse gas emissions and harsher civil penalties are among the proposed safeguard mechanism reforms that Australia’s biggest emitters will face from July 2023. Consultation on the draft safeguard mechanism reforms opened on Tuesday alongside a separate consultation on the government’s promised $1.9 billion Powering the Regions Fund. The proposed reforms are…

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  • CSIRO has recommended establishing a carbon sequestration technology steering group at the cost of up to $5 million to consult on and advise the government on investments and policy settings. The recommendation was made in a ‘stock take’ report which assessed the technology readiness, scalability, co-benefits, cost, and sequestration length of storage for twelve technologies….

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  • Western Australia has deepened relationships with its potential European hydrogen customers, undertaking a new trilateral study to fast track renewable hydrogen exports to the Netherlands and Germany. The study, which will focus on the Oakajee Strategic Industrial Area (OSIA), was announced by Innovation Commissioner for Green Hydrogen at Germany’s Federal Ministry of Education (BMBF) and…

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  • The Australian government is calling on the United States to make assurances that green hydrogen production tax credits, legislated through the Inflation Reduction Act, will not distort the global market, as international pressure mounts. In particular, the government is seeking “clarification on what, if any, steps the US may take to minimise the risk of…

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  • Demand for digital skills will be second only to health and care skills over the next four years, while the demand for ‘leading-edge’ green occupations is likely to be marginal, according to a new report by the National Skills Commission. In the modelled period, the demand for digital technologies and electronics skills, will grow by…

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  • The Australian Renewable Energy Agency will provide $45 million in support for a renewable energy storage project in Broken Hill and more than $400,000 for a feasibility study to convert a gas-fired power station. The funding, announced by Minister for Climate Change and Energy Chris Bowen on Friday, will flow to Canadian energy storage developer…

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  • The Singapore-Australia Green Economy Agreement will introduce a new innovation grants program and a green skills roundtable early next year, as the federal government commits $19.6 million to implement the agreement. The agreement was released at the end of the 7th Singapore-Australia Annual Leaders’ Meeting on Tuesday, the first official in-person meeting between Prime Minister…

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  • Electric vehicles now make up just over 3 per cent of all new car sales in the country, with the Australian Capital Territory continuing to lead the way by proportion of sales. Between January and September this year, 26,356 new plug-in electric vehicles (EVs) were sold, representing 3.38 per cent of all sales, according to…

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  • A new research mission led by the CSIRO has brought together $90 million in projects aimed at halving emissions in Australia’s hardest to abate sectors by 2035 while creating economic growth. The Towards Net Zero Mission will be launched by CSIRO chief executive Larry Marshall on Tuesday to create opportunity from emissions problem areas such…

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  • The Queensland government will spend $4 billion on support for energy transition and renewable infrastructure as part of a new ten-year energy and jobs plan that includes the world’s largest pumped hydro project and a new SuperGrid for renewables. Queensland Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk launched the plan at her State of the State address to the…

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  • Andrew Forrest’s $9 billion package to accelerate the decarbonisation of iron ore giant Fortescue’s operations by 2030  includes the mass deployment of more renewable energy as part of an accelerated plan “to transition to the post fossil fuel era.” The US$6.2 billion (AU$9.24 million) will be mostly invested in financial years 2024-28 and includes the…

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