Malaysia's state-owned Petronas, through its subsidiaries tanker firm AET and trading firm Petco Trading Labuan (PTLCL), is considering building a "zero-emission" Aframax dual-fuel tanker running on green ammonia.
AET will be responsible to select the shipyard to build the vessel, which could be delivered to PTLCL for long term charters by 2026. The firms also said they would "study opportunities for a green ammonia corridor in Southeast Asia".
The partnerships marks another step in AET's 2030 and 2050 decarbonisation plans, after the shipowner agreed to work with Thailand's state-controlled oil firm PTT to develop two green ammonia-fuelled Aframax tankers.
AET committed to hit net-zero GHG emissions by 2050 through progressive fleet renewal, increased energy efficiency and the use of a renewable energy mix — a more ambitious goal that the International Maritime Organisation's (IMO) target to halve emissions by 2050, compared with a 2008 baseline.

