11
Jun 21

Shipping industry agrees action on R&D investment and trade digitisation

As world leaders meet in Cornwall, England, for the G7, the first ever meeting of the equivalent maritime bodies, titled M7, took place on Wednesday 09 June 2021.

As world leaders meet in Cornwall, England, for the G7, the first ever meeting of the equivalent maritime bodies, titled M7, took place on Wednesday this week, organised by the UK Chamber of Shipping.

Delegates from the shipowner associations of the G7, plus those from Australia, India, South Africa and South Korea, were joined by the Secretary General of the International Chamber of Shipping, Chief Executive and Secretary General of BIMCO and a representative from ECSA.

There was universal agreement that more investment is needed from governments and industry to develop the technologies for a cleaner and greener shipping industry and that the G7 governments should be urged to back the shipping industry’s proposed $5bn R&D decarbonisation fund.

Delegates also agreed that more work was needed to help develop digital documentation to facilitate an increase in global trade as the world recovers from Covid-19.

The crew change crisis was discussed, and the extraordinary work seafarers have done over the past 15 months supporting global trade under extremely challenging conditions was noted. The meeting called for governments of the G7 to follow the lead of the United States, Canada and other countries in prioritising vaccinations for seafarers.

UK Chamber of Shipping President and Chair of the meeting, John Denholm said:

“Meeting for the first time, the M7 brought together the shipowning organisations of the G7, the UK, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, and the United States as well as those invited to the G7 event from Australia, India, South Africa and South Korea. The meeting discussed improving trade through digital documentation and the need for governments and industry to invest more in green research and development projects and the important role that seafarers were playing in keeping trade flowing through the Covid pandemic.

“The meeting noted the magnificent job that their seafarers had been doing through the pandemic and urged governments to make vaccines available to seafarers. It also fully supported the need to decarbonise and agreed that if the industry is to meet its goal of zero carbon emissions by 2050, large-scale investment in research and development is necessary as without this we simply will not have the technologies needed for the greener, cleaner shipping industry that we all want.” 

Ends

Notes to editors

The M7 is a new forum for the national ship owning associations of the G7 members and the meeting took place at 1300-1500 on Wednesday 09 June 2021 on Microsoft Teams.

The meeting was chaired by Mr John Denholm, President of the UK Chamber of Shipping, representing the Host Nation. 

The attendees of the inaugural meeting were: 

Armateurs de France – Jean-Emmanuel Sauvée – President

Canadian Chamber of Marine Commerce – Paul Topping – Director, Regulatory and Environmental Affairs 

Chamber of Shipping of America – Kathy Metcalf - President

CONFITARMA – Mario Mattioli – Chairman

Japanese Shipowners Association - Shunichi Arisaka - General Manager

UK Chamber of Shipping – Bob Sanguinetti – Chief Executive Officer  

German Shipowners‘ Association – Ralf Nagel – Chief Executive Officer

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Indian Shipowners Association – Anil Devli - Chief Executive Officer  

Korea Shipowners Association – Bongiee JOH – Managing Director 

Maritime Industry Australia – Teresa Lloyd – Chief Executive Officer 

South African Association of Shipowner and Agents – Peter Besnard - Chief Executive Officer

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BIMCO – David Loosley – Secretary General and CEO

International Chamber of Shipping – Guy Platten – Secretary General

ECSA - Luisa Puccio - Director Shipping & Trade Policy