1. Introduction
Due to globalization, the volume of commodities traded by vessels has been increasing. In addition, greenhouse gas emissions from international shipping have increased significantly, accounting for approximately 2% of global emissions in 2022.
Parties have negotiated at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) to address this issue. In 1996, the UNFCCC proposed eight options to allocate carbon dioxide emissions from international shipping to each country and region (Table.1).
2. Methodology
Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP): Comparing and evaluating the eight options proposed by the UNFCCC by four criteria, i.e., feasibility, administrative burden, fairness, and evasion for this study. Then, a hierarchy chart was created to select one option from the eight proposed options.
3. Preliminary result
We conducted a pairwise comparison of four criteria and obtained their weights shown in "Figure.2". Feasibility has the greatest weight, at 53.4%, followed by administrative burden (22.6%), fairness (12%), and evasion (12%).
We calculated each criterion's evaluated values based on "Figure. 2" and questionnaires comparing one option with other options. Then, we compared each option by each criterion's evaluated values and obtained "Figure.3".
Option 1 received the highest scores in three of the four criteria. On the other hand, Option 7 received the lowest scores for both criteria, and the scores for the other two criteria were not particularly high.
Finally, an overall evaluation value was obtained and shown in "Figure.4" based on "Figure.3". Option 1 received the highest value, followed by Option 3, Option 8, and others.
4. Implications
As a result of this study, two criteria, feasibility and administrative burden, were critical factors in evaluating each alternative. Ultimately, since Option 1 yielded the highest value, we preliminarily recommend selecting it as the best alternative.