https://www.climatechangenews.com/2021/03/18/shipping-industry-can-halve-climate-warming-black-carbon-arctic/

How the shipping industry can halve climate-warming black carbon in the
Arctic
Published on 18/03/2021, 4:22pm
Switching to cleaner shipping fuel would prevent Arctic warming and deliver
an easy win for the climate


With sea ice in retreat, the Arctic is opening up to shipping and
exploitation (Pic: Patrick Kelley, US Coast Guard)

By Sian Prior

Climate change is having a more rapid impact in the Arctic than anywhere
else right now – the recent cold weather that blanketed North America and
Europe, and caused chaos in places like Texas, has been linked to the
consequences of a warming Arctic. What happens in the Arctic doesn’t stay
in the Arctic – changes taking place in the north will have repercussions
further south.

While there is widespread awareness of how greenhouse gas emissions drive
global climate warming, what is less well known is how emissions of black
carbon particles from forest fires, wood stoves, flaring, energy generation
and transport, including shipping, contribute to Arctic warming.

Although shipping contributes just 2% of the black carbon emitted in the
Arctic, it has a much greater heating impact. When emitted by ships in and
near the Arctic, black carbon particles enter the lower levels of the
atmosphere, where they remain for under two weeks, absorbing heat.

But it eventually comes to land on snow or ice, black carbon’s warming
impact is 7 to 10 times greater, as it reduces the reflectivity (albedo)
and continues to absorb heat, accelerating the Arctic melt.

While most anthropogenic sources of black carbon pollution are being
reduced in the Arctic, shipping emissions of black carbon have risen
globally in the past decade, and in the Arctic by 85% between 2015 and 2019
alone.

With climate warming driving the ongoing loss of multi-season Arctic sea
ice, the region is opening up to more shipping traffic; with a five-fold
increase is expected by 2050, we can expect that further increases in black
carbon emissions from shipping will only further fuel an already
accelerating feedback loop.

Mauritius oil spill: questions mount over ship fuel safety

Around the world, ships typically burn the cheapest and dirtiest fuel left
over from the oil refining process – heavy fuel oil (HFO), which produces
high levels of black carbon when burned. About 7-21% of global shipping’s
climate warming impacts can be attributed to black carbon – the remainder
being CO2.

In November 2020, the International Maritime Organization (IMO), the UN
body which governs shipping, approved a ban on the use and carriage of HFO
in the Arctic – a ban that is set to be adopted this June.

Although environmental and Indigenous groups fought for years for the
Arctic to be free of HFO, the ban, set to be agreed in June 2021, contains
serious loopholes, which, when implemented, will likely translate to
minimal reductions in the use and carriage of HFO in 2024.

 Meanwhile, current growth in Arctic shipping is likely to lead to an
increase in HFO use and carriage in the Arctic between now and mid-2024,
when the ban takes effect and further growth by mid-2029, when the
loopholes will finally be closed. Under this regime, black carbon emissions
will, for now, continue to increase in the Arctic.

When the IMO’s Pollution Prevention and Response Sub-Committee meets on
March 22nd for PPR 8, black carbon will be on the agenda. The IMO has been
wrestling with what to do with regard to black carbon for over a decade now
– but so far has taken no concrete action to reduce emissions.

Scientists push to add “huge” fish trawling emissions to national
inventories

During PPR8, IMO member states have the chance to end this stasis. By
putting in place regulations that cut emissions of black carbon from
shipping the Arctic, the IMO can have a rapid and effective impact on black
carbon emissions. The fix is simple – by moving the shipping industry to
distillate fuels, such as diesel or marine gas oil (MGO), or other cleaner
energy sources, for vessels operating in or near the Arctic, immediately
reduce black carbon emissions in the Arctic by around an incredible 44%.

In addition, vessels using diesel or MGO should also be required to install
and use particulate filters, as are already required by land-based
transport.

Such a move could be led by industry, which would bolster confidence in
thesector’s claims of recognition of its climate responsibilities, and is
serious about staying the course towards eventual and inevitable
decarbonisation.

The bunkering industry, which supplies fuel for shipping, maintains that it
has ample supplies of the necessary distillate fuels available in the
Arctic to support a migration away from using heavy fuel oil. Ultimately,
future international regulation will also be needed to eliminate all
emissions of black carbon from shipping, as well as from other sources.

The Clean Arctic Alliance believes that by mandating a switch of fuels, the
IMO – and the shipping sector – could win an easy victory by achieving a
major cut of black carbon emissions in the Arctic. It would also be a win
for the global climate, for the Arctic and the people who depend on its
ecosystem for their livelihoods.

Dr Sian Prior is lead advisor to the Clean Arctic Alliance, a 21-member
coalition of not-for-profit organisations working to protect the Arctic
region

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"geoengineering" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/geoengineering/CAJ3C-065t8kW0pDiKFsFqHs%3D8riBSMYOo8n%2BzDG6BVF_1Z%3D-SA%40mail.gmail.com.

Reply via email to