Close Menu
  • Home
  • Maritime
  • Offshore
  • Port
  • Oil & Gas
  • Energy
  • Technology
  • Incidents
  • Environment
  • Events
    • Maritime
    • Offshore
    • Oil & Gas
    • Energy
  • Advertising
  • Contact
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
Trending
  • Biggest Salvage Ship In The World
  • YANMAR Slashes NOx Emissions By 90% With New SCR System For 6LY Engines
  • Ørsted Secures $3 Billion Financing for Taiwan Offshore Wind Project
  • Vancouver Port Authority Begins Bidding Process for $3 Billion Container Terminal to Boost Trade Capacity
  • Pinnacle Marine introduces Singapore’s first fully biodiesel-powered harbor craft
  • ExxonMobil wins extension for block offshore Angola
  • Deep Sea Vision, Deep Ocean Search Enter MoU
  • First Rastar 3200-W Series Tugboat Delivered To
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
Maritime247.comMaritime247.com
  • Home
  • Maritime
  • Offshore
  • Port
  • Oil & Gas
  • Energy
  • Tech
  • Incidents
  • Environment
  • Events
    • Maritime
    • Oil & Gas
    • Offshore
    • Energy
  • Advertising
Maritime247.comMaritime247.com
Home»Environment»100 days to surrender – Splash247
Environment

100 days to surrender – Splash247

June 23, 2025
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

Philippos Ioulianou, managing director of Emissionlink, on what shipping has learned from the EU ETS.

In less than 100 days, shipping companies operating in Europe face a critical test as the deadline for surrendering carbon allowances under EU ETS is September 30. Miss the deadline, and the consequences could be severe, Costly fines, exclusion from EU ports, public naming and shaming, even vessel detention in extreme cases.

This would be alarming in any context. But it’s especially concerning given that, only a couple of months ago, less than 40% of shipping companies had submitted their verified emissions reports, a basic prerequisite to surrendering allowances. The reporting deadline was 31 March. So already we are behind.

This first year of EU ETS implementation for the maritime sector has so far revealed the industry was woefully underprepared for the speed, complexity and fragmentation of compliance. But I would argue that it’s not entirely the industry’s fault.

Shipping’s global and highly decentralised structure makes ETS compliance inherently more complex than in other sectors. Ship owners, charterers and operators are often separate entities, based in multiple jurisdictions. A ship might be owned by a letterbox company in the Marshall Islands, operated from Greece, and chartered by a Chinese logistics group calling at Rotterdam.

This fragmented model clashes with the EU’s enforcement mechanism, which is grounded in national responsibility. Each EU member state is tasked with registering companies, verifying data, and opening ‘maritime operator holding accounts’ as a pre-requisite for surrendering allowances. Whilst some have moved swiftly, others, not so much. This is a problem that has been brewing for some time.

See also  Wiernicki: What IMO does next will decide shipping’s decarbonization success

To make matters worse, the European Commission has offered minimal regulatory guidance and underestimated the industry’s complexity—leaving major questions unresolved, including enforcement, jurisdictional responsibility, and the treatment of non-EU operators.

Beyond bureaucracy, the EU ETS is already re-shaping shipping’s commercial landscape. Contractual negotiations between owners, operators and charterers are now deeply entangled with ETS cost allocations. Who decides who pays for the allowances? Who handles the submission? What happens if a voyage straddles EU and non-EU ports? In addition, some charterers will only transfer funds two to three weeks before the surrender deadline. That creates an enormous risk for managers or owners who pre-purchase allowances and are left exposed to volatile EU Allowance (EUA) prices or non-payment. In many cases, ship managers have stepped up and took over the responsibility on behalf of owners and trusting that reimbursement will follow.

The absence of clear contractual frameworks has triggered delays, disputes, and in some cases, standoffs. And this is year one, when only 40% of emissions are covered for 2024. By 2026, that climbs to 70% of the emissions for 2025. By 2027, it’s 100%. The learning curve is steep, and the timeline is unforgiving.

To be fair, there are signs of progress. Verified emissions submissions have accelerated in recent weeks, and most large shipping firms have invested in digital systems and emissions advisory services, like EmissionLink, that make data tracking far more efficient and accurate, off-setting the shipowners challenges of compliance.

But these improvements don’t change the fact that ETS is here, it’s binding, and non-compliance will hurt. Some companies are banking on regulatory leniency this year and, who knows, they may get it. But leniency is temporary. Expulsion isn’t just a threat, it’s an enforcement tool. Charterers, too, are watching closely. A ship flagged for non-compliance might fetch a lower rate, or lose a contract altogether. Worse still, the reputational damage could extend beyond individual ships to entire fleets or brands.

See also  Peruvian fisherman survives 95 days lost in the Pacific

What comes next?

If we are to successfully decarbonise shipping, we need collaboration, not chaos. Stronger communication, better tools, and shared responsibility are key. The real lesson of the EU ETS’s first year is this: the industry is capable, but the system must be credible and agile to fit the industry. The next 100 days will define more than a compliance cycle. They will determine which players see regulatory change as a burden, and which treat it as a strategic opportunity.

Days Splash247 surrender
Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related Posts

Trafigura takes stake in ZeroNorth

July 9, 2025

Volume of maritime podcasts dials up in annual survey

July 8, 2025

New report calls for 0.1% sulphur content fuel worldwide

July 8, 2025
Top Posts

Car Carrier ‘Morning Midas’ Catches Fire with Electric Vehicles Off Alaska

June 5, 2025

China Fights Australia’s Plans to Reclaim Darwin Port Citing U.S. Influence

May 27, 2025

Fire-Stricken Wan Hai 503 Continues to Drift Off Indian Coast as Salvage Efforts Intensify

June 11, 2025

Denmark awards first-ever offshore wind farm life extension permit

June 4, 2025
Don't Miss
Energy

Viking takes delivery of newest future-proof cruise ship from Fincantieri

June 28, 2025

Introducing Viking Vesta: The Future of Ocean Cruising Swiss cruise line Viking has taken delivery…

Kongsberg Maritime To Provide Propulsion System For

June 25, 2025

Diversification of Dutch gas supply key to avoiding geopolitical pressure, says local player

February 17, 2025

Colombia Seizes First Unmanned Narco-Sub Equipped With Starlink Connection

July 4, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Your Weekly Dive into Maritime & Energy News.

About Us
About Us

Stay informed with the latest in maritime, offshore, oil & gas, and energy industries. Explore news, trends, and insights shaping the global energy landscape.

For advertising inquiries, contact us at
info@maritime247.com.

Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
Our Picks

PXGEO Appoints Head of Strategy and Transformation

July 8, 2025

US renews Serica’s North Sea field sanction exemption

February 27, 2025

Lloyd’s Register, Seatransport, and Deployable Energy Develop Nuclear Power for Ships

April 15, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Your Weekly Dive into Maritime & Energy News.

© 2025 maritime247.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Advertising

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.