‘Don’t fail your children’: youth demand climate action at UN shipping talks

School striker Noga Levy-Rapoport urged the International Maritime Organization to set speed limits at sea, for the sake of young and future generations

Schoolchildren sent origami boats with messages about climate change to delegates at UN shipping talks (Pic: Campaign against Climate Change)

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Schoolchildren urged the shipping industry to speed up climate action by slowing down, as talks on how to curb emissions started at the International Maritime Organization on Tuesday.

After striking a climate deal last year, national representatives at the IMO are considering short-term measures to put it into practice, including speed limits at sea.

Noga Levy-Rapoport, 17, addressed delegates on behalf of the UK Student Climate Network, telling them there was no time to waste.

“What have you got to show for twenty years of talk? A weak new ship design standard and a decarbonisation objective that’s not ambitious enough,” she said. “Don’t fail your children because you refused to change.”

Under its 2018 climate pact, the IMO has committed to cutting the carbon intensity of shipping 40% by 2030 and halving the sector’s carbon footprint by 2050.

Shipping: Climate advocates split over speed limits at sea

However it is not due to finalise the strategy for meeting those targets until 2023. A handful of countries including France are promoting speed limits as the best way to start cutting emissions sooner.

European neighbours Denmark, Germany and Spain are arguing for a less prescriptive approach to improve operating efficiency, while developing countries such as Brazil, Saudi Arabia and Chile have raised concerns about the economic impact of potential regulations.

Levy-Rapoport, who is active in the school strike movement, told Climate Home News she was not familiar with shipping before green NGOs invited her to speak. She researched it and found out the sector has a carbon footprint the size of Germany or Japan.

“I spoke about the necessity for urgent climate action for an industry that is so, so important and plays a large role in global emissions,” she said. “I do hope they [IMO delegates] listened.”

Specifically, she argued the IMO should cut ship speeds at least 10% and aim for more.

Meanwhile, the UK-based Campaign against Climate Change delivered origami boats carrying climate messages from schoolchildren to the desks of negotiators.

Outside the venue, activists dressed as traffic wardens showed their support for a go-slow at sea.

At a conference on protection of the maritime environment at the weekend, Catholic groups from key shipping nations announced plans to divest from fossil fuels.

These included the Archdiocese of Panama and Caritas Philippines. Panama is home to the world’s largest shipping registry and the strategically important Panama Canal, making it an influential player at the IMO. Around a quarter of seafarers come from the Philippines.

Climate change has hit home in Panama lately. The worst drought on record forced the canal operators to impose draft limits, meaning ships had to offload some cargo to pass through.

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