Efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from international shipping may have hit a roadblock. A new study suggests that using LNG, long seen as a less-dirty alternative, may in fact cause more emissions than using traditional marine fuels, reports Safety4sea.
ICCT Report
A recently published report by the International Council on Clean Transportation (ICCT) and commissioned by the environmental lobby group Stand.earth.
The report aimed to examine the lifecycle GHG emissions from marine fuels, including a previously poorly understood source of climate emissions from LNG-powered ships- the unintentional releases of the climate super-pollutant methane from ship engines, known as methane slip.
The 40-page report, commissioned by international environmental organisation Stand.earth, states that high-pressure injection dual fuel (HPDF) engines using LNG emit 4% more lifecycle GHG emissions than if they used marine gas oil (MGO).
Results from the new study show this technology emitted 70% more lifecycle GHGs when it used LNG instead of MGO and 82% more than using MGO in a comparable medium-speed diesel engine.
“Continuing to invest in LNG infrastructure on ships and on shore might make it harder to transition to low-carbon and zero-carbon fuels in the future,” the report stated.
The authors found that using LNG could actually worsen the shipping industry’s climate impacts compared to MGO when considering the amount of heat these emissions will trap over a 20-year period.
Methane emissions are particularly problematic because methane traps 86 times more heat than the same amount of carbon over a 20-year period.
What will the LNG switch result in?
“This groundbreaking new analysis is a damning climate indictment of LNG as marine fuel. For a sector that is already one of the largest contributors of global greenhouse gas emissions, this report reveals that switching ships to LNG is worse than doing nothing,” said Kendra Ulrich, senior shipping campaigner at Stand.earth.
She added, “This should serve as an alarming wake-up call for the International Maritime Organization, which must act now to ensure it includes all greenhouse gas emissions in its emissions reduction strategy.”
Dr Elizabeth Lindstad, chief scientist at SINTEF Ocean, argued it was vital regulators start to acknowledge the whole well-to-tank emissions of ship fuels.
“If we fail to include all GHGs and focus only on CO2, we might end up with a large number of ships fulfilling all efficiency requirements, but where the GHG savings are on paper only,” she said.
Path to Zero emissions
Lobby group SEA\LNG remains convinced that the chilled gas has a strong future as a “pathway” to get shipping towards zero-emissions.
Peter Keller, chairman of SEA\LNG, commented last month: “As convincing, qualified evidence supporting the environmental, operational and commercial benefits of LNG continues to emerge, acceptance of its credibility is becoming increasingly widespread and concrete.”
“LNG is the only safe, mature, commercially viable marine fuel that offers superior local emissions performance, significant greenhouse gas reduction benefits today, and a pragmatic pathway to a zero-emissions shipping industry,” he said.
In a widely read contribution on this site from 2018, Dr Tristan Smith from UCL Energy Institute wrote that methane is a potent greenhouse gas, and only a very small amount needs to escape to cancel out the combustion CO2 benefits from LNG as a ship fuel.
“LNG’s flaws are more fundamental – it is a fossil fuel that just like oil produces about three tonnes of CO2 for every tonne of fuel consumed. This makes it an ‘impasse’ in a world committed to decarbonise,” Smith argued.
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Source: Safety4sea