The African Airlines
Association (AFRAA) has thrown its weight behind the International Civil
Aviation Organisation on the historic agreement reached at the just concluded
39th Assembly by member states on emission. According to AFRAA, “The
Secretary General of the African Airlines Associations, Dr. Elijah Chingosho,
welcomed the landmark agreement to control carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions from
international aviation that was reached at the 39th Assembly of the
International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) in Montreal, Canada”.
“We applaud this deal that was struck after tense negotiations during the
last few years. The 191 states and the various stakeholders including AFRAA, AFCAC
and IATA worked very hard through the ICAO system and managed to find the necessary
compromises to establish the first sectorial deal to reduce CO2 at global
level. African airlines, the aviation industry, other stakeholders as well as
African institutions have been consistently advocating a global solution under
ICAO’s leadership for several years”- Chingosho stated.
Commenting further
Chingosho said: “This is the world’s first climate deal aimed at reducing global
greenhouse gas emissions from international air travel. The deal was
overwhelmingly approved on 06 October with 191 countries agreeing to a global
market-based measure (GMBM) to control CO2 emissions from aviation.
The Carbon Offsetting and
Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA) would complement a range
of mitigation measures the air transport industry was already looking at to cut
CO2 emissions which includes improved aircraft technology, efficient infrastructure,
operational measures at airports and expanded use of sustainable alternative
fuels”.
“The historic agreement is
significant because the Paris Agreement, which was reached at last year’s COP21
summit, did not cover aviation and shipping. This is the first worldwide scheme
to address emissions in any single sector. The agreement ensures that the
aviation industry can meet its economic and social contributions in an environmentally
sustainable manner”.
The GMBM will start from
2021 on with a pilot phase until 2023. In the following year, there will be a
voluntary first phase until 2026. From 2027 on, the measure will be mandatory
for all States, with some exemptions, such as for least developed countries,
small island developing states, landlocked developing countries and states with
very low levels of international aviation activity which virtually covers
almost all African states which advocated differentiated treatment.
“It is heartening to note
that those countries that contribute the most to global air transport, including the United
States, China, the European Union, Australia and Japan have signed and joining up voluntarily to
implement this system”.
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