A Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) has been signed
by the International Maritime Organization (IMO), the Ministry of Climate and
Environment of Norway, and the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA),
with the intention to collectively undertake technical cooperation activities to
assist developing countries in their efforts to reduce emissions from ships and
in ports.
Participants
will work together to exchange experience, knowledge and best practice, and undertake joint resource
mobilisation with a view to cooperate and collaborate on actions to reduce
greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from ships and the activities of ships in ports,
within the frameworks of the NextGEN Connect initiative and the GreenVoyage2050
Project.
The
NextGEN Connect initiative was established between the IMO and the MPA in April
2022.
The initiative aims to bring industry, academia and global research centres
together, to offer inclusive solutions for maritime decarbonisation for trials
along shipping routes.
The IMO-Norway GreenVoyage2050 Project was
established in May 2019 by the IMO, with funding from the Government of Norway
to support developing countries, including Small Islands Developing States
(SIDS) and Least Developed Countries (LDCs), in their efforts to implement the
Initial IMO Strategy on the Reduction of GHG Emissions from Ships.
The MoU was signed on March 20, 2023 by Mr Kitack
Lim, Secretary-General of the IMO, Mr Sveinung Oftedal, Chief Negotiator for
Green Shipping of the Norwegian Ministry of Climate and Environment, and Mr Teo
Eng Dih, Chief Executive of the MPA, on the sidelines of the 14th
Intersessional Working Group on the Reduction of GHG Emissions from Ships
(ISWG-GHG 14), convened at the IMO Headquarters in London, United Kingdom.
Said Mr Kitack Lim: “IMO is pleased to combine the capabilities of the IMO-Norway
GreenVoyage2050 project and the IMO-Singapore NextGEN Connect initiative to
collectively implement green shipping activities, in particular those that
can support development of low and zero-carbon fuels and related bunkering
infrastructure.”
Commented Mr Teo Eng Dih: “. This MoU is an important partnership that brings together our projects
with the mutual goal to test solutions along shipping routes. This will
help reduce greenhouse gas emissions from shipping in an inclusive manner and
with the support of like-minded States, aggregate demand along the supply
chain.”
The MoU signing underscores the commitment of the
partners to work together to create a more green, sustainable and efficient
maritime industry, emphasised a release.