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Maritime convenes to achieve goals for a sustainable future

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The shipping industry came together in New York at the Global Maritime Forum’s Annual Summit 2022 to tackle systemic challenges and opportunities.

The participants will discuss the need to take concrete action on shipping decarbonization, improve human sustainability, and safeguard the benefits of global trade.

More specifically, Jan Dieleman, Chair, Global Maritime Forum and President, Cargill Ocean Transportation stressed the need for collaboration to tackle increasingly complex and interdependent issues.

The challenges facing the industry in the years to come are incredibly complex and will take a long time to resolve. It will not be easy, and it will not be accomplished in silos. That is why we must and can do it together

Participants also focused on how to translate high ambition for shipping decarbonization into tangible next steps and implement solutions collaboratively, for example by joining forces to establish further Green Corridors.

They sent a clear signal that they are ready to move, but that the industry needs policy support to make the green transition economically viable as well as certainty that green fuels will be available.

In addition, they highlighted the potential of improving operational efficiency through collaborative action to reduce emissions immediately and lower the cost of the transition.

Let’s keep going, let’s double down on our efforts. We’ve got storm clouds on the global economy. Let’s not get blown off course, let’s keep the discipline and show that shipping can do it

added Jeremy Nixon, Chief Executive Officer, Ocean Network Express.

Furthermore, with the war in Ukraine and geopolitical unrest disrupting trade, Global Maritime Forum said that it has become very clear that shipping plays an important role in ensuring human well-being globally, delivering much needed food, energy, and fertilizer, and underpinning global growth and economic development.

For this reason, participants stressed the need to preserve these critical trade flows, suggesting that certain goods could be exempt from sanctions.

As I have highlighted, trade has an enormous role to play. And especially maritime trade. Despite all the challenges, maritime trade will become more, and not less, important in the years to come

stated Rebeca Grynspan, Secretary-General, UNCTAD in her keynote speech.

Finally, taking steps to improve human sustainability in the maritime industry was another focal point of the discussions. Importantly, talent and workforce welfare emerged as a cross-cutting theme in the broader discussions as participants recognized that many of the other challenges and opportunities can only be overcome if human sustainability issues are addressed.

Transport workers have become much more visible because of the pandemic. We must learn the lessons of the pandemic, and we must be able to deliver the sustainability for the maritime professionals. It is critical that we keep up the pressure

Stephen Cotton, General Secretary, International Transport Workers’ Federation, concluded.

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