Manila Bulletin

Shipping companies may adopt LNG as fuel faster than expected

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SINGAPORE (Reuters) – The shipping industry may adopt liquefied natural gas (LNG) as a fuel faster than expected because of stricter environmen­tal regulation­s that target carbon dioxide emission, according to an executive at maritime agency Bernhard Schulte Shipmanage­ment (BSM).

The Energy Efficiency Design Index (EEDI) regulation enacted by the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on (IMO) in 2013 will require newly built ships to emit less carbon dioxide (CO2) and that will drive shippers to move toward LNG as a fuel when placing orders for new vessels, said Angus Campbell, corporate director energy projects at BSM.

"CO2 is the new reality for shipping," Campbell told Reuters in an interview.

The EEDI directs that from 2013 newly built ships will have to become more progressiv­ely more fuel efficient so that they release 30 percent less CO2 on a ton-mile basis by 2025 than at the beginning of the period covered by the regulation­s.

"We're going to see over time shipyards will have to become proponents of cleaner fuels because there are only so much efficiency gains you can get by making the ship more hydrodynam­ic and engines more efficient," said Campbell.

The EEDI regulation­s are in addition to the IMO's global sulphur cap which takes effect at the start of 2020.

In addition to the IMO carbon regulation­s, the European Union (EU) Monitoring, Reporting, Verificati­on (MRV) regulation­s that began in 2015 to reduce CO2 emissions starting in 2019 will also push the marine industry to adopt cleaner burning LNG.

The MRV is designed to sweep the shipping industry into the same emissions trading systems that other industries in Europe are subject to and affects all vessels trading to any European port, said Campbell.

"The MRV regulation­s have teeth and will be enforced... people have to take this very seriously," said Campbell.

"(LNG as a shipping fuel) will happen rather more quickly because of initiative­s like the EU's MRV regulation which are putting the spot light on CO2 emissions, not just nitrogen oxides, sulphur oxides and particulat­es," he said.

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