Monitoring the carbon footprint of dry bulk shipping in the EU: An early assessment of the MRV regulation

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Abstract

Aiming at reducing CO2 emissions from shipping at the EU level, a system for monitoring, reporting, and verification (MRV) of CO2 emissions of ships was introduced in 2015 with the so-called 'MRV Regulation'. Its stated objective was to produce accurate information on the CO2 emissions of large ships using EU ports and to incentivize energy efficiency improvements by making this information publicly available. On 1 July 2019, the European Commission published the relevant data for 10,880 ships that called at EU ports within 2018. This milestone marked the completion of the first annual cycle of the regulation's implementation, enabling an early assessment of its effectiveness. To investigate the value of the published data, information was collected on all voyages performed within 2018 by a fleet of 1041 dry bulk carriers operated by a leading Danish shipping company. The MRV indicators were then recalculated on a global basis. The results indicate that the geographic coverage restrictions of the MRV Regulation introduce a significant bias, thus prohibiting their intended use. Nevertheless, the MRV Regulation has played a role in prompting the IMO to adopt its Data Collection System that monitors ship carbon emissions albeit on a global basis.

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Panagakos, G., Pessôa, T. de S., Dessypris, N., Barfod, M. B., & Psaraftis, H. N. (2019). Monitoring the carbon footprint of dry bulk shipping in the EU: An early assessment of the MRV regulation. Sustainability (Switzerland), 11(18). https://doi.org/10.3390/su11185133

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