IMO : Supporting financing for maritime decarbonisation PDF
Maritimes decarbonization needs financial instruments – but these need to take into account the needs of developing countries, to ensure no one is left behind. This message was highlighted during a panel debate at the World Oceans Summit (1 March) on financing shipping decarbonization.
IMO’s Gyorgyi Gurban said that pilots and trials of new technologies for shipping decarbonization were promising. Now, these pilots needed to be scaled up – and this needs investment from international finance institutions. Importantly, investment in technology development needs to ensure that research and development in the global north is shared with knowledge, research, and development hubs of the global south.
IMO has set the policy framework for decarbonization, with mandatory energy efficiency measures already adopted and a revised GHG strategy set to be adopted in 2023. Additional regulatory measures could be adopted, but financial stakeholders should not wait for this to happen, Ms. Gurban said.
“If we don’t step up already now with this investment and continued pilot projects then we will be too late when the regulatory framework is fully fixed,” she said.
The other panelists were: Nancy Karigithu, Principal Secretary, State Department for Maritime and Shipping Affairs, Ministry of Transport, Infrastructure, Housing, and Urban Development, Kenya; Gianpiero Nacci, Director, Head of Climate Policy and Delivery, Industry and Infrastructure, EBRD; and Alexandre Amedjian, Head of Shipping Finance, Europe, Middle East, and the Americas, Societe Generale.
The FIN-SMART initiative is being implemented by IMO with the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) and the World Bank (WB), to link recipient and donor countries, International Financial Institutions, and private banks and industry representatives. It aims to find financial solutions to accelerate maritime decarbonization in the developing world.
FIN-SMART has analyzed the suitability of current financial mechanisms to support the transition and future needs of decarbonizing the maritime sector in LDCs and SIDS. Potential solutions have been identified, which could include partnering financial institutions to mitigate risks and build capacity for grant access, and developing bankable project proposals.
IMO’s Department for Partnerships and Projects is involved in a number of other maritime decarbonization projects, including GreenVoyage2050, FIN-SMART, the GMN global MTCC network project and the NextGEN portal of decarbonization initiatives – read more here.