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SPECIAL THEMATIC SECTION ON CLIMATE POLICY IN CHINA

The prospect of engaging China in the ICAO global MBM scheme

 

Abstract

The International Civil Aviation Association (ICAO) plans to establish a global MBM (market-based measures) scheme for international airlines in 2016. With substantial interests in the aviation and aircraft manufacturing industries, China is an important player in the implementation of the ICAO’s plan. This article argues that the prospect of China’s participation will be shaped by both normative and economic considerations, including state sovereignty, the principle of common but differentiated responsibilities and industrial interests in aviation and aircraft manufacturing. It suggests that among the options considered by the ICAO, China prefers the ‘baseline-and-credit’ approach, which is to decentralize and incorporate energy-efficiency standards. It highlights that the impact of the ICAO’s plan on the international competitiveness of the Chinese aircraft manufacturing industry might concern China in the long term. With the stances of the EU, the US and other major economies taken into account, it concludes by making policy recommendations for the ICAO to help reconcile the discrepancies between China and the other major players.

Policy relevance

While a general consensus has been reached on the necessity of using MBMs to reduce international aviation emissions, the details of the ICAO’s global MBM scheme are still subject to further negotiations, which with no doubt will be tough. Engaging China is be crucial to the implementation of the ICAO’s plan. By exploring China’s perception of international norms and its economic interests, this article presents an initial attempt to understand China’s preferences and the direction of its future interactions with the ICAO and other major economies.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Notes

1 See the reservations made by these players at the 38th ICAO Assembly. Retrieved from http://www.icao.int/Meetings/a38/Pages/resolutions.aspx.

2 For further information, see the 2008 White Paper ‘China’s Policies and Actions for Addressing Climate Change’ released by the Chinese State Council, in which CBDR is perceived as ‘the core principle of the UNFCCC’. Retrieved from http://www.gov.cn/english/2008-10/29/content_1134544.htm.

3 For a detailed discussion about ‘historical responsibility’ in global climate negotiation, see Friman (Citation2007).

4 See the reservations made by China at the 38th ICAO Assembly. Retrieved from http://www.icao.int/Meetings/a38/Pages/resolutions.aspx.

5 See the Ranking Tables from World Air Transport Statistics (WATS): https://www.iata.org/pressroom/facts_figures/Pages/watsrankings.aspx.

6 In China such airliners are termed as large aircrafts, which by definition have a gross weight of at least 100 tons or are capable of carrying 150 passengers at minimum. See China Daily (Citation2014a; Xinhua, Citation2008).

7 The development of airliner engines has been listed as a ‘National Science and Technology Major Project’. See China Daily (Citation2013).

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by ‘Chinese Ministry of Education Designated Research Program 2015 (Project Number 15JZD035)’ and Fudan University under New Faculty Member Research Initiative.

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