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Maersk strengthens commitment to shipping fuel methanol

  • : Biofuels, Hydrogen, Oil products, Petrochemicals
  • 22/10/05

Danish shipping firm Maersk is doubling down on its commitment to use green methanol as an alternative marine fuel, adding six more containerships powered by the lower-carbon alternative to its orderbook.

Maersk has been a strong proponent of methanol as a marine fuel. In July 2021 the firm announced that it had commissioned the first methanol-fuelled ship, due to be delivered by mid-2023. A month later, it placed an order for an additional eight methanol ships, due for delivery in 2024, and later exercised an option to add four more ships. The latest commissioning brings the orderbook to 19.

The six new 17,000 20ft equivalent unit (TEU) ships, built by Hyundai Heavy Industries, are scheduled to be delivered in 2025 and will be fitted with dual fuel engines capable of running on methanol. According to Maersk, the six vessels running on green methanol will have a combined CO2 emissions saving of around 800,000t. When all 19 vessels are deployed, replacing older vessels, they will generate a CO2 emissions saving of around 2.3mn t.

On the supply side, Maersk has formed partnerships with six companies to boost global capacity to at least 730,000 t/yr by 2025. The new addition to its fleet of methanol-powered vessels will allow the company to use more of the excess supply that it generates with its partners.

The firm said it will need we need around 12,000t/yr of the green fuel to run its first methanol vessel, while almost 500,000 t/yr will be required by 2025 when the next 12 containerships are delivered. "If we imagine we will run our entire fleet on green methanol — and it will probably be a combination of methanol, ammonia and other fuels — then we will need 20mnt t/yr," Maersk head of ocean decarbonisation and innovation Jacob Sterling said today at The Economist Sustainability Week. Currently, green methanol production of around 30,000 t/yr is used in petrochemicals and plastic production, with no volumes going to the shipping sector, he said.

The capital expenditure to run methanol has fallen according to Maersk. Compared with conventional fuel capabilities, the extra cost required for methanol dual fuel capability is 8-12pc, which marks an improvement from when it placed orders a year earlier, the firm said.

Argus assessed methanol in Rotterdam, Europe's largest bunkering port, at a $111.75/t premium to very low sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO), and at a $232.50/t discount to marine gasoil (MGO) yesterday.

Maersk brought forward its deadline to reach net zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions to 2040, a decade ahead of its initial 2050 target, at the start of the year. The shipping major's targets go further than the International Maritime Organisation's (IMO) own GHG reduction strategy, which aims to reach CO2 reduction of 40pc and 70pc by 2030 and 2050, respectively, compared with 2008 figures.

The company is also looking at marine biofuels, and used a total of 81,000t in 2021, up from 32,000t in 2020 and 8,000t in 2019, but has ruled out using LNG in its container shipping business.


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