Carbon-offset deal seen costing airlines up to $6.2 bln in 2025

Carbon offset costs could be higher if deal not reached by October

Carbon offset
The carbon offset deal could cost airlines up to $24 billion by 2035 as air traffic grows.  Aeroflot photo.

By Allison Lampert

MONTREAL, May 11 (Reuters) – A global market-based measure to curb aviation emissions would cost the airline industry up to $6.2 billion in the year 2025, but carriers could face higher charges if governments fail to reach a deal by October, the International Air Transport Association said, citing ICAO figures.

Government representatives are gathering Wednesday at the International Civil Aviation Organization to negotiate a draft deal on carbon-neutral growth from 2020 which is to be voted on at a fall assembly.

“That of course is the result the industry is counting on,” IATA Chief Executive Tony Tyler told participants at a global sustainable aviation forum in Montreal on Tuesday, in reference to the draft deal.

By 2035, the deal would cost airlines up to an estimated $24 billion, as air traffic grows, according to figures from the Montreal-based International Civil Aviation Organization, or ICAO.

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The cost projections are for sample years after the deal would become active in 2021.

Airlines are nevertheless urging ICAO’s 191-member states to reach a global agreement in the fall because the cost of a patchwork of national and regional agreements could be even higher.

“A market-based cost will be much more efficient, and much fairer than the alternative which is a patchwork of inefficient and ineffective charges and taxes which are cooked up primarily just to raise cash rather than to tackle climate change,” Tyler said. “We expect that the cost will be not insignificant, but it will be manageable.”

According to ICAO data cited in an IATA position paper, the estimated cost of offsetting a flight carrying 267 passengers from Moscow to New York on a B777 would cost up to $804 in offsets.

Aviation was not included in the global climate deal reached at a U.N. conference in Paris in December, and ICAO is tasked with nailing down a strategy to limit emissions after six years of talks.

The plan would allow airlines to offset their emissions by buying carbon credits from designated environmental projects around the globe, but countries remain divided on how offset obligations are shared between developing and developed states.

ICAO’s proposed Carbon Offsetting Scheme for International Aviation recommends bringing in thecarbon offsets agreement in phases to accommodate developing nations and exempting the world’s least-developed countries. But in a recent position paper, China raised concerns that the deal would “impose inappropriate economic burden on developing countries, where the international aviation market is still maturing.”

(Reporting By Allison Lampert; Editing by Andrew Hay)