|

ICM ETS passes “significant” aviation industry milestone






ICM ETS Ltd has performed its first pre-verification assessment for a large business aircraft operator, Gama Aviation. This marks a significant milestone as the aviation industry prepares to be verified under the EU Emissions Trading Scheme (EU ETS) for the first time.

A pre-verification assessment is a process which mimics the full legal verification and involves inspecting documents, reviewing data and interviewing personnel involved at each stage of ETS monitoring. It is designed to help the operator identify any areas which have the potential to become an issue during a legal audit and give them time to correct the problem before the official verification begins.

Although the industry has resisted entry into the scheme, Gama have been proactive in preparing their monitoring systems and its ETS co-ordinator Sam Walker said: “This was a fantastic opportunity to test our monitoring systems and to highlight any areas for potential further development. It has also shown our staff what to expect during the full verification and helped them to understand how their role relates to the ETS monitoring process as a whole.”

The assessment took two days on site with a team led by Lucy Candlin of Future Perfect and Neil Duffy, from ICM ETS providing the aviation knowledge.

“As the aviation industry prepares to have its emissions verified under a mandatory scheme for the first time, many operators’ staff will not have experienced a process like verification before,” said Mr Duffy.

At the end of the assessment, Gama were presented with an Issues Log, listing the areas which may be developed in order to ensure a smoother audit, ease the administrative burden of compliance and an explanation of what the regulators expect. This helps to ensure their systems meet the requirements of the scheme when the time comes to report their emissions and tonne-km data.

While aviation is new to the EU ETS, static installations have been reporting their emissions for several years under the scheme. As a result, the regulators have existing expectations of what operators are required to do. Understanding these expectations, as well as the aviation specific issues relating the ETS, and interpreting them, both in the context of each other is vital to performing verifications.

“ICM ETS has been working in partnership with Future Perfect Limited, combining our aviation experience with their verification experience to develop and deliver a verification service designed specifically for aircraft operators.”

“In addition to our pre-verification service, in order to help operators prepare for the scheme, ICM ETS and Future Perfect will be offering a two day training course in July. This course is designed to help operators understand how to set up their monitoring processes and the level of control the regulators expect.”

More information about this course, can be found at http://www.gptrainingconsultants.com/courses/climate-change/aviation-emissions-reporting-_693.shtml.

If interested in undergoing a pre-verification assessment, or want more information about the formal verification process, please visithttp://www.i.im/ets.php.

ICM ETS also has a detailed summary explaining how the scheme applies to aviation, which is available at http://www.i.im/icm-ets.php.

The company is currently conducting a survey of aircraft operators to discover how well they have prepared for the EU ETS. If you wish to take part, please visit http://www.ets-survey.eu.




◄ Share this news!

Bookmark and Share

Advertisement







The Manhattan Reporter

Recently Added

Recently Commented