Danish container ship giant A.P. Moller – Maersk became the latest member of The Methanol Institute (MI), which serves as the global trade association for the methanol industry. This comes shortly after the company revealed plans of its first carbon-neutral vessel, being launched in 2023, to be a methanol dual-fuel ship.
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The company has earlier announced its upcoming shift to environmentally friendly technologies. In December 2018, Maersk announced its ambition of net-zero CO2 emissions by 2050 and has since identified its primary fuel candidates to be carbon-neutral methanol (bio-methanol and e-methanol), alcohol-lignin blends and carbon-neutral ammonia along with the use of biofuels.
More recently, in February 2021, the company announced the launch of the world’s first liner vessel to operate on carbon-neutral methanol in 2023 – seven years ahead of the initial 2030 ambition. All future Maersk-owned newbuildings will have dual-fuel technology installed, enabling both carbon-neutral operations and operation on standard very low Sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO).
Maersk’s first methanol feeder vessel will have a capacity of around 2,000 TEU and be deployed in one of its intra-regional networks. While the vessel will be able to operate on standard VLSFO, the plan is to operate the vessel on carbon-neutral e-methanol or sustainable bio-methanol from day one.
We have a lot of work ahead of us to find the projects which are truly scalable, carbon-neutral and capable of meeting strict life cycle analysis criteria. Maersk is very pleased to join the Methanol Institute and is looking forward to further engagement with green methanol suppliers to advance the introduction of carbon neutral methanol in global shipping,
…said Berit Hinnemann, Senior Innovation Project Manager, A.P. Moller – Maersk.
In the Ocean segment, Maersk has a fleet of over 700 container vessels transporting almost 13 million containers per year around the globe. Consuming more than 10 million tonnes of bunker fuel per year, Maersk is one of the largest consumers of bunker fuel oil.
MI is delighted to welcome Maersk as our newest member. Maersk’s choice of methanol as the fuel for its first dual fuel vessel sends a strong signal to the shipping industry that methanol is a marine fuel for today and tomorrow,
…added Methanol Institute CEO Gregory Dolan.