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by bt848 2457 days ago
You seem to have conflated CO2 with other pollutants. All the world's shipping taken together amounts to only 3% of the carbon emission inventory. It certainly is not the case that 15 ships emit more carbon than all cars.
2 comments

Where does the 3% figure come from? It's not clear to me that we have or are even trying to get accurate sea-based emissions inventory.
You can get a very good inventory just from sales of petroleum-based fuel to the shipping industry. Nobody buys diesel or LNG except to burn it.
> It certainly is not the case that 15 ships emit more carbon than all cars.

That is correct. However, the pollutants that the referenced ships produce are far more hazardous (immediately) and in greater volumes than many countries produce (in aggregate) per year. To put it in perspective...warning: this is an analogy that mixes metaphors:

Talking about CO2 emissions while Nuclear Waste is constantly being pumped into the ocean is shuffling the deck chairs.

I don't follow what you're saying. Is it that other emissions than CO2 are more important to fight?

Well, that change is already happening with the ongoing big change towards LNG as the preferred fuel for shipping.

But when it comes to reducing CO2 emissions, outside of improving energy efficiency, it seems nobody has anything even remotely viable today. That goes both for deep sea shipping and for most air travel.

There's always sailing, although it's a bit laborious, and fission has a good record at sea :-)
There is some progress in applying wind power to shipping (other than the traditional fixed sails) - https://www.ship-technology.com/projects/msbelugaskysails/

The German company SkySails has been working for years on kites that can reduce fuel use on large ships. I think at some point we'll see alternative (renewable) energy taking over shipping as it is gradually taking over other domains.