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US sanctions UN members who support IMO emission plan

The United States threatened on Friday to use sanctions and visa restrictions to retaliate to nations who vote in favor of the plan proposed by an agency of the United Nations to reduce greenhouse gas emissions that are responsible for global warming from ocean shipping.

Next week, U.N. member countries will vote on the International Maritime Organization’s Net-Zero Framework to reduce global CO2 gas emissions. The international shipping industry handles about 80% of the world's trade and is responsible for about 3% of greenhouse gases.

Under pressure from investors, large container carriers agree that a global regulation framework is essential to accelerate decarbonisation. Despite this, many of the largest oil tanker companies in the world expressed "grave concern" over the proposal.

In a joint press release, U.S. Secretary for State Marco Rubio and U.S. Energy and Transportation Secretary Chris Wright said that the Administration "unambiguously rejects" this proposal.

They said that the "proposal poses serious risks to global economic stability and exposes not only Americans but also all IMO members to an unapproved global tax regime which imposes punitive, regressive and regressive penalties,"

Supporters of the IMO proposal said that without global regulation the maritime industry would be faced with a patchwork regulations and increased costs, while not being able to effectively reduce climate-warming, greenhouse gas emissions.

In a statement released on Friday, U.S. officials stated that the U.S. was considering retaliation towards U.N. member countries who support the plan.

This could include imposing visa restrictions, fees and sanctions on officials who "sponsor activist-driven policies in climate change." Reporting by Ismail Shakil, Lisa Baertlein and Tom Hogue; Editing by Costas Pittas and Tom Hogue

(source: Reuters)