Carbon-neutral MGO can emerge as future marine fuel: DNV

Carbon-neutral marine gasoil will emerge as a strong competitor as future bunker fuels against ammonia and methanol in the shipping industry’s pursuit of decarbonization, maritime classification society DNV has predicted.

In its latest annual Maritime Forecast to 2050 report, the Norwegian-headquartered organization presented 24 scenarios of future bunker mix based on which shipping companies can either halve vessel emissions by 2050 from 2008 levels, which is the International Maritime Organization’s target, or achieve full decarbonization.

Bio-MGO or e-MGO often have higher prices than other carbon-neutral fuels in the scenarios, but the fuel is competitive, as it has higher energy intensity and can be used without major modifications to existing ship engines and bunkering infrastructure, DNV’s principal consultant in maritime environmental technology Eirik Ovrum said.

Based on DNV’s definition, carbon-neutral fuels are those with zero or negligible lifecycle emissions. No carbon offsets are involved.

Petroleum-based MGO accounted for 30% of global bunker consumption last year, according to S&P Global Commodity Insights’ estimates. Many analysts, including some at S&P Global, have predicted that ammonia and methanol could become the most used low-emission marine fuels by 2050 amid maritime decarbonization.

In all of DNV’s scenarios, the use of bio-LNG, e-LNG, bio-MGO and e-MGO as drop-in fuels is significant and depends on the pace of decarbonization.

While some industry participants suggested investors could have a more definite target if a single, dominant low-emission fuel emerges, Ovrum expected the industry to adopt multiple fuels produced via various means.

Full-scale decarbonization requires large investment, according to DNV. To achieve decarbonization by 2050, DNV’s analysis showed that an additional investment of $8 billion to $28 billion per year is needed for new types of vessels, and $28 billion to $90 billion per year is needed for onshore infrastructure. Annual fuel costs could increase by more than $100 billion to $150 billion when shipping is fully decarbonized.

For the near term, the industry has to invest $40 billion annually in bunkering and fuel production by 2030 to have 5% zero-emission fuels in the bunker mix, according to a research report jointly published on Sept. 21 by UK-based maritime consultancy UMAS and the UN Climate Change High-Level Champions.

Tags: Carbon-neutral, DNV, Maritime Forecast, MGO
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