Ships entering or leaving EU ports would be required to purchase credits for the greenhouse gases that they emit.
In  the midst of a diplomatic row over the inclusion of aviation in the  EU's emissions trading scheme (ETS), the European Commission is to  propose bringing maritime transport into the scheme. 
All ships entering or leaving EU ports would be  required to purchase credits for the greenhouse gases that they emit.  This would correspond to the requirement that was introduced for  aircraft in January. 
The Commission is obliged to propose a market-based mechanism to reduce shipping emissions because a meeting last week of the International Maritime Organization  (IMO) failed to make headway on creating a global agreement to reduce  emissions. The EU's 2009 ETS law requires that the Commission act  unilaterally to reduce shipping emissions, as it did with aviation, if  there is no global solution by December 2011. 
While the IMO was meeting last week, Chinese media  were claiming that Hong Kong Airlines would cancel an aircraft order  with Airbus in retaliation for the EU's insistence on including foreign  airlines in the ETS system. European media reports then cited Berlin  sources as saying Germany was reversing its support for including  aviation in the ETS. 
But Hong Kong Airlines would not confirm that it had  made any such threat, and this week the German environment and economy  ministers issued a joint statement insisting that they still support the  Commission in its battle with foreign airlines. Complete Post at:
http://www.europeanvoice.com/article/imported/commission-sets-sights-on-including-shipping-in-ets/73782.aspx
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