Comprising 17% Of GHG Emissions By 2050

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The Ship It Zero coalition has urged shipping companies to cancel all new fossil fuel newbuilds in their orderbooks and invest only in zero-emission technologies and fuels for their future global fleets., reports Offshore Energy.

100% zero-emission

On 23 May, the climate and public health campaign that seeks to move the world’s largest retail companies to 100% zero-emission ocean shipping, sent an open letter to chief executive officers (CEOs) of five large ocean carriers. In the letter, the campaign urged the CEOs to invest profits in reducing fossil fuel use and catalyzing the shift to zero-emission vessels.

Container shipping companies including CMA-CGM, A.P. Moller-Maersk, MSC Mediterranean Shipping Company, Evergreen Marine, and Ocean Network Express (ONE) have reported record-breaking profits as a result of COVID-related consumer spending and supply chain disruptions over the last two years. Now, it’s their duty to use these earnings for making shipping cleaner, Ship It Zero believes.

Reducing global GHG emissions

United Nations IPCC report Climate Change 2022 Mitigation of Climate Change released last month makes clear the world must immediately be reducing global GHG emissions from current levels. It states that we have just eight years left to halve climate-disrupting emissions from 2019 levels and warns that continued investment in fossil fuel assets and infrastructure will lock-in high emissions, the coalition wrote in the letter.

In unveiling the report, United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres stated clearly:

“Investing in new fossil fuels is moral and economic madness.”

Moreover, the World Meteorological Organization warned on 9 May that there is a 50:50 chance of global temperatures reaching the 1.5°C threshold within the next five years. As already known, the international shipping industry accounts for 3% of global greenhouse gas emissions, making it one of the world’s top 10 climate polluters.

Air pollution

Air pollution from the heavily-polluting cargo ships has been linked to 6.4 million childhood asthma cases annually and contributes to over 250,000 premature deaths in primarily Black, Brown, Indigenous, poor, and working-class neighborhoods. On its current trajectory, shipping is expected to comprise 17% of global greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

According to Pacific Environment and Stand.earth’s Cyber Monday 2021 report, Shady Routes: How Big Retail and their Carriers Pollute along Key Ocean Shipping Corridors, the abovementioned companies are among the top maritime polluters among companies that ship to the United States, responsible for at least 11,994,007 tons of carbon dioxide emissions from 2018 to 2020.

“We agree with the words of UN Secretary Guterres: Continued and increased investments by your companies in brand new fossil fuel assets at this critical time in global climate history is indeed moral and economic madness.”

“This statement holds particularly true for LNG, as the IPCC finds that methane emissions must be reduced by 33% by 2030 in order to have a chance to stay within a 1.5°C emissions pathway. For the shipping and aviation industries specifically, the IPCC report finds that “natural gas-based fuels are expected to be inadequate to meet stringent decarbonization goals for these segments (high confidence).”

These findings build on analysis from the International Council on Clean Transportation that found that LNG-powered ships emit between 72-80% more lifecycle greenhouse gasses than diesel-powered ships in the short and mid-term.

Calculating methane emissions

The methodology in the ICCT report was used to calculate methane emissions from the shipping sector in the UN International Maritime Organization Fourth Greenhouse Gas Study 2020. The IMO study concluded that although LNG use had increased by 28-30% between 2012 to 2018, methane emissions from the sector had increased by a staggering 151-155%. This was largely attributed to the high levels of unintentional methane emissions in the most widely used duel-fuel LNG ship engine.

“For these reasons and more, we urge you to only buy and build new ships with 100% zero-emission ship propulsion fuels and technologies from well-to-wake – in addition to taking immediate action to retrofit existing ships in your fleets to reduce their climate and air pollution. In considering carbon neutral fuels, fuels should be evaluated on a “lifecycle” basis, i.e. from extraction or production, through processing, to emissions resulting from use on board. This must include any leakage, slips and venting throughout the lifecycle of that fuel. All greenhouse gases (GHGs) and co-pollutants like Black Carbon must be accounted for, not just CO2. Finally, carbon offsets cannot be included as a part of a viable decarbonization pathway.”

No one silver bullet 

While there is no one silver bullet to decarbonize the maritime sector, there are multiple options both currently available and as emerging technologies and fossil-free fuels that will reduce and ultimately eliminate greenhouse gas emissions and air pollution from international shipping. These include efficiency retrofits, shore power, green hydrogen-based fuels, batteries, and wind.

“We urge you to invest in and rapidly scale up the use of these technologies in your global fleets,” Ship It Zero stressed.

“The global shipping industry has and can continue to play a significant role in advancing global technologies and markets that benefit communities around the world. We must have a livable planet in order to continue to realize those benefits.”

Ship It Zero is led by an alliance of environmental organizations including Pacific Environment, STAND.earth, and Sort Your Ship Out. It is pushing corporations to take responsibility for their ocean shipping pollution and lead the way to climate-friendly, clean-air shipping practices.

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Source: Offshore Energy