A Call for Unity: IBIA Urges Alignment on Global Shipping Rules at MEPC 84

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Based in London, the International Bunker Industry Association (IBIA) has issued a strategic directive ahead of the MEPC 84 session at the IMO headquarters. Representing the global marine energy value chain across 70 countries, IBIA aligns with major shipping associations to safeguard the IMO’s role as the sole global regulator. This unified stance aims to prevent a fragmented landscape of regional carbon taxes, ensuring that the transition to low-carbon fuels remains commercially viable and globally consistent.

London | April 23, 2026 – As the maritime world converges on London for the 84th session of the Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC 84), the International Bunker Industry Association (IBIA) has released a high-stakes statement reaffirming its support for a unified, global approach to decarbonization.

Aligning with a joint industry statement issued on April 20 by major global shipping associations, including BIMCO, ICS, and the World Shipping Council, IBIA warns that the success of the IMO’s greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction pathway depends on a “global maritime ecosystem” working under a single regulatory authority.

The timing of IBIA’s statement is critical. Following the postponement of the IMO Net-Zero Framework adoption in late 2025, the industry faces an “investment killing” cloud of uncertainty. IBIA argues that the IMO remains the only body capable of delivering a level playing field, preventing a chaotic “patchwork” of regional and national decarbonization schemes that could impose multiple penalties on the same ship for the same emissions.

Key Pillars of the IBIA Position:

For IBIA, the “bunker” side of the equation is the linchpin. The association stresses that the delivery of marine energy to the global fleet is the final, practical step in any GHG reduction measure. Without clear guidelines on fuel intensity and verifiable emission factors, the supply chain cannot de-risk the massive investments required for green ammonia, methanol, or biofuels.

“Delivery of marine energy to the global fleet, enabling compliance with IMO GHG reduction measures, is critical to achieving successful and effective implementation,” the association noted in its official release.

Industry analysts suggest that IBIA’s advocacy will be focused on the technical foundation of the Net-Zero Framework. Specifically, the association is pushing for:

As MEPC 84 kicks off on April 27, IBIA will be a primary voice representing the fuel supply chain, ensuring that the technicalities of bunkering are not overlooked in the high-level policy debates.

The International Bunker Industry Association (IBIA) is the authoritative voice of the global bunker industry, representing all sectors and stakeholders across the marine fuels value chain.