-
But Natural gas-powered vessels are becoming more popular as a halfway measure as a search continues for non-carbon-based fuels.
According to an article published in The Wall Street Journal, the maritime industry, under growing pressure to reduce shipping’s carbon emissions, is coming to a growing consensus that liquefied natural gas will provide an intermediate solution toward finding cleaner fuel to power ships.
Emerging Role of LNG
Two of the world’s biggest container lines have ordered vessels that will operate with LNG, while Royal Dutch Shell PLC and Australian miner BHP Group Ltd. have been offering long-term charters to shipowners willing to build natural gas-fueled tankers and bulk carriers over the past year.
“The choice of LNG is now emerging as a mature energy solution, especially effective in terms of environmental protection,” said Mélanie Rigaud, a spokeswoman for France’s CMA CGM SA, which operates 13 LNG-powered container ships and is taking delivery of another 19 such ships by next year.
The focus on new fuel sources marks the biggest change in ship power since the sector switched from coal to oil more than 100 years ago.
Meeting IMO Goals
The effort is aimed at meeting a deadline set by the International Maritime Organization, the United Nations marine regulator, to cut carbon emissions in half by 2050 compared with 2008 levels. Choices on measures to meet the target carry high stakes for ship operators, with shipping services provider Clarkson Research Services Ltd. estimating it may cost the industry more than $3 trillion to switch to new forms of power.