THE World
Economic Forum recently held a high-level debate on shipping's
decarbonisation, which featured among others, Soren Skou, CEO of
AP Moller Maersk, Ley Hoon Quah, CEO, Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore
(MPA) and Jan Dieleman, head of ocean transportation at Cargill.
During the hour-long
webinar, the Danish shipping company's Mr Skou revealed that the world's
largest liner has now contracted a yard to build a ship running on a green
fuel, reports Singapore's Splash 247.
Maersk officials have
yet to reveal which yard is building the ship. In February, the Danish carrier
said it would order a methanol-fuelled 2,000 TEU feeder vessel this year to
begin operating in 2023.
"We are beyond the
chicken and egg situation in our case as we have ordered our first ship that
will run on a green fuel and we have said that every ship we order from now on
will be capable of running on a green fuel," Mr Skou said during the
online conference.
The debate at the World
Economic Forum centred around regulatory demands to drive shipping down a green
path.
"Today business is
ahead of governments on this agenda. We need more sense of urgency
frankly," Mr Skou said, demanding regulation that can start to ensure
shipping has proper availability of green fuels.
"IMO, in our view,
needs to deliver a market-based measure by 2025 that can be implemented in the
second half of this decade," Mr Skou stressed, adding: "It needs to
be at a reasonable level that actually tries to level the playing field between
much more expensive green fuels and fossil fuels but it also has to very, very
importantly include all greenhouse gases and it has to consider the full
lifecycle of the fuel."
Mr Skou mentioned
Maersk's ongoing studies into the technical aspects of running ships on green
ammonia and green methanol, saying "I am actually confident now having
worked this agenda for two and a half years that we will solve the technical
problems". He said the next stage is figuring out how to make the green
fuels available.
Mr Skou said Maersk's
thinking on offering decarbonisation solutions to clients was not a capex, but
a business opportunity. He said demand for Maersk's new biofuel service was
growing "exponentially" because clients are putting their money where
their mouth is in terms of getting their supply chains green.
On the topic of a
carbon tax, Mr Skou said shipping had a huge advantage in that it is globally
regulated by the IMO. "We can create regulations that create a global
level playing field," he said, saying that for Maersk the question of
which future fuels would work best has already been decided.
"It is going to be
some combination of methanol and ammonia and it is going to be more expensive
and therefore a carbon tax is starting to make sense for us," Mr Skou
said.
Cargill's Mr Dieleman
said shipping needed to keep focusing on efficiencies, pointing out how his
company, one of the world's largest charterers, has been involved with wind,
which helps reduce the green premium.
On future fuels, Mr
Dieleman said it was vital regulators stepped in to close the price gap with
existing bunker fuel.
"If you really
want to scale it then you will need to come back to policy where putting a
price on carbon and levelling the playing field between those fuels is
absolutely needed to really make the next step," Mr Dieleman said, adding
"The private sector is clearly doing its bit and now it's up to IMO and
governments to weigh in".
Mr Dieleman said that
while a global carbon tax scheme would be ideal, the difficulty of getting it
in place soon would likely see regional schemes enter into force earlier.
"If a global
scheme is going to take too long, the industry will need to live with some
intermediate steps because we need to get going on this topic," he said.
Singapore port boss Ms
Ley told participants that all port authorities around the world are preparing
for a multi-fuel transition.
"The key is about
scaling up, once you have the technology financing needs to come in in a bigger
way," she said, comparing the situation to how solar panels have plummeted
in price over the past decade as they've become more and more popular.
In concluding, Maersk's
Mr Skou called for higher ambitions in the IMO in the form of a market-based
measure that includes all greenhouse gases, not just CO2.
"I'm saying that
because I am worried about the narrative around LNG," Mr Skou said.
Maersk, unlike most
global liners, has eschewed ordering any LNG-fuelled ships.
Source : HKSG.
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