Latest figures released by DNV from its Alternative Fuels Insight (AFI) platform, reveal an 8% increase in ships ordered or retrofitted with alternative fuel propulsion in 2023.
DNV logged 138 projects for methanol, including retrofits, compared with 130 for LNG, all of which were for new ships. The almost four-fold increase in methanol-fuelled ships from 35 in the previous year indicated that methanol had gone ‘mainstream’, the classification society said. Container ships represented the lion’s share of new methanol contracts, 106, followed by 13 for bulk carriers and ten for pure car and truck carriers.
The 130-ship LNG tally in 2023 was down sharply on the 2022 total of 222. However, last year’s deals have taken the total of LNG-fuelled ships, excluding LNG carriers, through the 1,000-ship threshold, according to DNV. Container ship owners ordered 48 LNG-fuelled vessels, operators of car carriers 40, and tanker owners 30.
The AFI platform also recorded the first contracts for ships designed to run on ammonia – 11 were ordered. But hydrogen proved less popular compared with 2022 – down from 18 to five.
Tags: AFI, DNV, Fuel, LNG, Methanol
Recent Posts
Polish Delegation and JKSH Group Explore Green Energy Project in Andhra Pradesh
bigbasket Expands EV Delivery Fleet to 50 Cities with Support from Kazam
Axpo Completes Spain’s First Ship-to-Ship Bio-LNG Bunkering for Container Vessel at Algeciras
BLG LOGISTICS and Liebherr Strengthen Sustainable Port Operations with Shore Power-Ready Crane in Bremerhaven
Beijing Maersk Enters Service as Latest Methanol-Powered Containership
Yinson GreenTech and C-Torq Deliver Marine Battery System for Hybrid Vessel in the Middle East
Singapore Tugboat Receives Biofuel-Ready Notation Following Retrofit
NYK Names Sixth Dual-Fuel LPG Carrier “Luna Pathfinder”