FINLAND's Transport Minister
Merja Kyllonen said allocating money to develop sulphur emissions-reducing
technology would be a "major topic" in national budget talks this
week, reports United Press International.
The government says
compliance with the stringent European Union directives on sulphur emissions on
the Baltic Sea will cost Finnish shipping industry and its customers up to
US$750 million a year.
While the government
considers spending money on developing green technologies, Finnish exporters,
who failed to derail the EU sulphur directive, are now asking tax breaks to
meet compliance costs. Under the EU directive, after 2015 the fuel sulphur
content for any ship plying the Baltic Sea must not exceed 0.10 per cent or its
exhaust gas must be cleaned to that same level.
Ms Kyllonen favoured state
funding in the development of clean technologies to help vessels reduce their
emissions of nitrogen oxides, sulphur oxides and particulates. Carriers can
switch to costly low-sulphur fuel, or retrofit exhaust systems with filters
known as wet scrubbers, or else fuel ships with liquefied natural gas. Ms
Kyllonen said Finland's new budget should provide money "targeted at
building environmentally friendly vessels and retrofitting exhaust gas cleaning
systems, in particular so-called wet scrubbers, on existing vessels."
Source : SN-TR, 04.09.12.
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