According to Sea-Intelligence, Brexit has caused a 24 per cent decrease in total reportable sailing distance in the North Atlantic.
The EU ETS went into effect in January 2024, meaning that ships that visit EU ports must pay a fee on CO2 emissions.
A ship sailing between two EU ports must pay a carbon tax for the whole route, but a ship going between a non-EU port and an EU port must pay a carbon tax for half of the journey.
While it has no direct influence on Sea-Intelligence’s study, the EU requires just 40 per cent payment of the ETS tax in 2024, increasing to 70 per cent in 2025 and 100 per cent in 2026.
The UK’s exit from the EU has reportedly created a loophole in the ETS. This means that UK port calls might be counted as the first or final port call before an EU port.
For example, if a vessel travels from New York to Antwerp, the carrier must report emissions for 50 per cent of the route since it is going from a non-EU port to an EU port.
However, if the same carrier makes a port stop at Felixstowe between New York and Antwerp, the carrier must pay zero ETS from New York to Felixstowe, as they are both non-EU ports and 50 per cent ETS for the extremely short route from Felixstowe to Antwerp.
