Posted - Daily News - September 26, 2013
The
International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) has reiterated its support for
the development of a global system of monitoring, reporting and
verification (MRV) of green house gases from ships but said support
for the UN's International Maritime Organization plan depends on making
it simple, based on fuel consumption and that it not become a
compulsory market-based scheme of mandatory energy indexing for all
ships.
ICS stated it has concerns about the recent proposal by the European Commission for a regulation mandating a regional system.
In related news the ICS has submitted detailed comments to the
International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) on its controversial
proposals to overhaul international accounting rules for leases, which
could have an impact on contracts used in international shipping,
including those governing operational arrangements.
Following intensive
discussion amongst its member national shipowners’ associations during
the last few weeks, the ICS comments represent the consensus view of the
world’s shipowners.
“ICS has again tried
to explain to IASB that the use of a variety of shipping contracts,
including time and voyage charters, reflects the long-established modus
operandi of the shipping industry. These arrangements are transportation
service contracts. They are not an attempt to disguise the use of
financial leases, or the ‘Enron’ scale abuses which the new IASB
standards are intended to prevent," Isaid CS Secretary General, Peter
Hinchliffe.
He added “Shipowners have no problem with being transparent about
such arrangements which can be dealt with through notes in company
accounts, but they should not be treated as balance sheet liabilities.”
“The majority of our
members still have concerns about the latest IASB proposals, which, if
ever implemented, could even result with some companies becoming in
technical breach of existing covenants with financial institutions,”
Hinchliffe added.
In its latest
comments, ICS objects to the IASB proposals in principle and highlights
their complexity and the difficulties that many shipping companies would
face in complying with them. ICS seriously questions the benefits to
third parties’ understanding of the financial position of shipping
companies relative to the cost and complexity involved with implementing
the proposals. ICS therefore requests that the IASB drops its proposals
and instead, if felt necessary, make improvements to the classification
of leases in existing IASB standards.
Post to be found at:
http://www.ctl.ca/news/international-chamber-of-shipping-backs-emission-reporting-challenges-proposed-new-accounting/1002614773/
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