World’s First S90 Methanol Engine Retrofit Confirmed

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Everllence has announced the completion of the world’s first conversion of an Everllence B&W S90 two-stroke engine to dual-fuel methanol running. The announcement followed the successful sea trials of Cosco Shipping Lines’ 20,000+ TEU container vessel, Cosco Shipping Libra. The vessel’s 11S90ME-C engine was retrofitted to an S90 methanol engine, specifically an 11S90ME-LGIM (-Liquid Gas Injection Methanol) unit.

Everllence PrimeServ, Everllence’s after-sales division partnered with Cosco Shipping Heavy Industry from concept to execution in delivering the world first S90 methanol engine retrofit.

The full-scope project covering engineering, project management, installation, commissioning and sea-trials. As part of the process, Everllence invested in a dedicated 4S90 testbed engine in Japan that was commissioned in early 2025. The testbed validated the S90 engine’s methanol performance under real operating conditions, accelerating its readiness for this “first-ever” large-bore milestone.

We’re proud to support Cosco Shipping Lines and Cosco Shipping Heavy Industry — and the maritime industry as a whole — in taking this significant step toward decarbonizing shipping,” said Michael Petersen, senior vice president and head of Everllence PrimeServ, Denmark. “This milestone highlights Cosco Shipping Lines’ role as a first mover and presents a practical path for reducing emissions from Everllence S90 engine vessels. It also showcases Everllence’s capability to deliver large-scale retrofit projects. With 26 dual-fuel conversions already completed and an even larger pipeline across various alternative fuels, shipowners can trust Everllence to deliver retrofit solutions at scale.”

Unlocking opportunity

Looking beyond the Cosco Shipping Libra retrofit that proves the viability of methanol as a marine fuel, Everllence believes that the potential for further large-bore retrofits is substantial with over 300 vessels worldwide currently equipped with S90 class engines and therefore potential candidates for similar retrofits.

While the journey toward full decarbonization will require collaboration across the industry, this achievement demonstrates that large-scale conversions are both technically proven and commercially viable,” said Petersen. “This opens a practical pathway towards accelerating the maritime energy transition together with our customers.”

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Source: Everllence