Posted - November 19, 2013 - MarineLink.com
The International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) has written
to the French Government to raise concerns about a new requirement for
foreign shipowners to provide information to their French customers
about CO2 emissions. The new rules apply a detailed methodology that has
not been discussed internationally and appears to have slipped under
the radar of the international shipping industry.
ICS says that Article L. 1431-3 of the French Transport Code came
into effect for foreign shipping companies in October 2013. It adds that
shipping companies are still trying to understand the detail of the new
CO2 reporting requirements, the English translation of which has only
recently come to attention. However, serious concerns are already being
raised by international companies about the validity of the
methodologies that have been developed by France’s Ministry of Ecology,
Sustainable Development and Energy and set out in the Methodological
Guide for Transport Services.
The global shipowners' body says it believes that the unilateral
application by France of these new CO2 reporting requirements to foreign
ships cuts across the principles of global regulatory uniformity and
“the primacy of IMO as the regulator of international shipping”. ICS
says it has reminded France of the difficulties that would be created if
other coastal states were to implement their own unilateral
requirements for the reporting of CO2 emissions by ships.
ICS has suggested that France’s director general for maritime transport
should advise that these requirements will not be enforced, pending the
outcome of discussions on the monitoring and reporting of fuel
consumption and CO2 emissions currently taking place at the
International Maritime Organization (IMO).
Source: Maritime London
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http://www.marinelink.com/news/requirement-emissions361201.aspx
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