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Regulatory Momentum Builds: IMO's Net-Zero Push and New Emissions Control Standards

By MGN EditorialApril 28, 2026 at 06:00 PM

The International Maritime Organization advances its net-zero framework while new Selective Catalytic Reduction system requirements and ongoing debates over exhaust gas cleaning assessments reshape emissions compliance across the industry.

The maritime industry faces a convergence of regulatory pressures as the International Maritime Organization (IMO) advances its environmental agenda and new technical standards reshape how shipping manages emissions. At the 84th session of the Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC 84) in London, IMO Secretary-General Arsenio Dominguez called on Member States to reach convergence and make meaningful progress on the IMO Net-Zero Framework, which aims to cut global shipping emissions. The framework represents a significant commitment from the maritime sector to decarbonization, positioning shipping as a leader in multilateral environmental cooperation. The regulatory momentum extends to specific technical requirements. On May 1, 2026, updated Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) system guidelines take effect, introducing changes to how NOx measurement accuracy is assessed for catalyst monitoring. The shift from a fixed ±5% accuracy requirement to a more flexible "sufficient accuracy" standard places greater responsibility on applicants and operators to determine appropriate measurement protocols. This change reflects the industry's evolving approach to emissions control, though it introduces new compliance considerations. Parallel to these regulatory developments, industry stakeholders continue debating assessment methodologies for exhaust gas cleaning systems (EGCS/scrubbers). Recent claims about scrubber environmental impacts have increasingly diverged from standard assessment practices, highlighting a critical principle: the methods used to evaluate environmental evidence are as consequential as the evidence itself. Standardized assessment protocols remain essential to ensuring that environmental claims about emissions technologies are grounded in consistent, reproducible analysis. The convergence of IMO policy, new SCR standards, and methodological scrutiny signals that maritime environmental compliance is entering a more rigorous phase. Operators and equipment manufacturers must navigate increasingly specific technical requirements while industry bodies work to establish consistent global assessment standards.
#IMO#emissions#net-zero shipping#SCR systems#EGCS#environmental compliance#MEPC

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