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CENTRO INTERNAZIONALE STUDI CONTAINERSANNO XXXVIII - Numero MAGGIO 2020

TRANSPORT AND ENVIRONMENT

UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES

Less than a month into 2020, VLSFO came under attack by environmental groups. In this feature article for the first 2020 issue of World Bunkering, IBIA's Director Unni Einemo examines potential undesirable side-effects of the 0.50% sulphur limit.

Few involved in the bunker and shipping industries will have failed to notice the controversy surrounding the use of very low sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO) blends to comply with the 0.50% sulphur limit imposed on fuel for ships since the start of 2020. Throughout 2019 debate was raging around the potential safety implications of such fuel, both regarding the inherent quality of new blend recipes and incompatibility risk associated with comingling VLSFOs from different sources onboard ships. Those concerns remain with us but at least they are well understood by now. IBIA, among others, worked hard to provide the supply and shipping industries with the tools to produce, handle and use compliant fuels safely.

But in January 2020, VLSFO came under attack amid claims these blends would cause an increase in emissions of black carbon because they are more aromatic than the high sulphur fuel oil (HSFO) they have been made to replace. If that's true, this will be one of several examples of unintended consequences associated with MARPOL Annex VI, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) regulation dealing with air emissions from shipping.

The main goal of reducing the sulphur limit for marine fuels to 0.50% sulphur is to improve air quality to reduce shipping's negative impact on human health. Several studies have told us so, and while estimates vary hugely regarding just how many premature deaths will be avoided thanks to the new global low-sulphur regime, the positive impact of the MARPOL Annex VI regulation is not in dispute.

IBIA has for some time, however, been pointing out the "MARPOL Annex VI paradox": almost everything we do to improve air quality has a negative impact on efforts to stem global warming, either directly linked to what happens on ships or indirectly due increasing emissions from other sources to provide ships with cleaner, less polluting fuels. The latter forms part of the debate around lifecycle, or well to emissions of gases that contribute to global warming, such as increased CO2 emissions from refineries to produce lower sulphur fuels and methane slip during the production and distribution of LNG. I'm not going into detail on that here. Suffice it to say it's hard to get a handle on it because numbers presented by various studies vary a lot.

Direct impacts from ships relate to how much CO2 or other greenhouse gases (GHG) they emit. On the positive side, IMO has introduced mandatory energy efficiency measures under MARPOL Annex VI aimed at making ships technically and operationally more efficient, consequently reducing CO2 emissions per tonne of cargo carried by ships. The reduction in the sulphur limit outside emission control areas (ECAs) from 3.50% to 0.50% at the start of 2020 may have a positive side effect because low sulphur fuels cost more, incentivising more efficient ships. Ships using exhaust gas cleaning systems (EGCS), or scrubbers, however, will emit slightly more CO2 due to the extra energy required to run the scrubber. They may even sail faster and hence burn even more fuel because they can continue to use cheaper high sulphur fuel oil (HSFO). These are among the most obvious direct impacts that few would dispute, although actually quantifying them is less straightforward. There are other, less obvious and even harder to quantify
direct GHG impacts from ships associated with meeting sulphur emission limits. These include methane slip from ships using LNG (which depends on what type of engines and fuel systems they use), how much black carbon they emit, and just how big the impact will be from the huge reduction in shipping's sulphate emissions, which have a cooling effect.

Black carbon - facts or speculation?

The IMO begun concrete work on how to address black carbon (BC) emissions from shipping almost a decade ago. It is not an easy subject and many aspects of it are difficult to understand, including for example how to measure it most effectively and the exact relationship between fuel types and BC emissions. Among the many studies submitted to the IMO on the subject over the years, it has been asserted that fuel type has a significant impact with HSFO generally singled out as the worst offender. It hasn't always been clear-cut however, as some studies pointed to engine load as a bigger factor than the fuel type and the fuel sulphur content, at least when talking about petroleum-based fuels ranging from low sulphur marine gasoil (MGO) to HSFO, and everything in between.

Like all particulate matter resulting from burning stuff, including fuels, BC is bad for human health. It has one other key attribute; it is light-absorbing and therefore BC, or soot in layman's terms, is associated with global warning. Suspended in the atmosphere it warms by absorbing sunlight, while soot deposits make ice and snow melt faster. This is why IMO's work has been focusing on reducing BC emission from shipping in the Arctic, where its impact is most severe. LNG is a clear winner for reducing all PM, including BC, but there's no near-term plan to require ships in the Arctic to stop using oil-based fuels. There is, however, parallel work underway at the IMO to develop measures to reduce risks of use and carriage of heavy fuel oil (HFO) as fuel by ships in Arctic waters. The outcome will likely be a ban on carrying and using HFO in the Arctic, subject to an assessment of the impacts on the region to ensure the positives (reduced pollution risk) outweigh the negatives (increasing cost of shipping activities in the region).

Work relating to BC emissions, and the development of an HFO ban in the Arctic, are both on the agenda at the 7th session of the IMO's Sub-Committee on Pollution Prevention and Response in mid-February. Among the papers submitted to PPR 7 is a study which claims new blends of marine fuels with 0.50% sulphur content increase BC emissions by 10% to 85% compared to HFO with a 2.5% sulphur content and by 67% to 145% compared to DMA-grade MGO with 0.1% sulphur. The reason for this increase is that fuels with 0.5% sulphur content used in the study contained a high proportion of aromatic compounds in a range of 70% to 95%, compared to 50% in the 2.5% sulphur HFO reference sample and 20% in the DMA reference sample. The study, submitted to the IMO on 15 November 2019, was followed by submissions from FOEI, WWF, Pacific Environment and CSC calling for urgent action to prevent the use of 0.50% sulphur fuel blends in the Arctic and ensure only distillates are used.

In January, the Clean Arctic Alliance sent a letter addressed to the co-authors of the Joint Industry Guidance (JIG) on "The supply and use of 0.50%-sulphur marine fuel", including IBIA. In the letter, which was widely publicised, the Joint Industry Guidance (JIG) was criticised for making "no mention of low sulphur fuel blends containing high levels of aromatic compounds nor of an increase of black carbon emissions of potentially up to 2.45 times that of the distillate DMA." The letter also insinuated that the industry associations behind the JIG should have been aware of this and should have immediately sought to halt the production of these fuels and alert the IMO.

IBIA was surprised by the study's assertion that the 0.50% sulphur fuel oil blends are expected to have higher aromatic content than traditional HSFO, especially as the expectation prior to 2020 was that many of the new marine fuel blends would be more paraffinic in nature.

The shift to 0.50% sulphur fuels is still in its early days but early indications from several fuel testing agencies have indicated that 0.50% sulphur fuels seen so far tend to be more paraffinic and less aromatic than the HSFOs they have replaced. As such, it seems premature to draw any valid and meaningful conclusions on the level of black carbon emissions associated with the use of 0.50% sulphur fuels.

When the IMO's Marine Environment Protection Committee decided, at its 70th session (MEPC 70) in October 2016, to implement the 0.50% sulphur limit in 2020, the availability study used as the basis for the decision said blended fuels with between 0.10% and 0.50% sulphur would account for 73% of global consumption from international shipping. As industry prepared, fuel producers began formulating VLSFO blends intended to replace HSFO as economically as possible for use by the global fleet. The focus was not on producing fuels specifically for use in the Arctic, although concerns about the cold flow properties of distillates for use in cold regions was taken into account to ensure ships don't end up with solidified fuel, like candlewax, in their tanks. The primary focus during 2018 and 2019 was on whether the VLSFO blends would be safe, with a particular focus on stability and compatibility because more paraffinic blend components were expected to be used and might create issues when mixed with fuel components that have traditionally been more aromatic in nature. The JIG, which was published in August 2019, was developed to support suppliers, ship managers and seafarers prepare and implement the use of 0.50% sulphur fuels as safely as possible. The document was entirely focused on the safe handling and use of compliant fuels and did not investigate or comment on any other issue.

IBIA, along with co-authors of the JIG, supports a thorough scientific debate of the black carbon issue at the IMO. Furthermore, IBIA believes IMO decisions should be based on solid evidence and science that stands up to scrutiny, and it is important that all interested parties retain open and inquisitive minds when examining potentially conflicting information.

The work underway to develop a ban on the use and carriage of HFO in the Arctic could offer a way forward. PPR has been tasked with developing a definition of HFO, taking into account regulation 43 of MARPOL Annex I which gives a definition of heavy grade oil (HGO). All carriage of HGO, as fuel and as cargo, is banned in the Antarctic. HGO is defined as all oil with a density at 15°C higher than 900 kg/m3 or a kinematic viscosity at 50°C higher than 180 mm2/s. This definition means all the marine fuel grades meeting current ISO 8217 marine distillate (DM) specifications would be allowed for carriage and use in the Antarctic. Residual grades (RM), although several of them have a kinematic viscosity at 50°C below 180 cSt, all have a maximum density limit in excess of 900 kg/m3, which would not be allowed. Although many of the VLSFO blends seen so far have viscosity below 180 cSt, most have tested above 900 kg/m3 threshold used in the HGO definition and as such would be eliminated by using this definition. To help reduce BC emissions in the Arctic further in the future, investigations could be made into including a limit on aromatic content in HFO. If so, we need to understand how it can be measured and tested by a recognised test method, and whether we need a new ISO 8217 specification parameter to do so.

The SOx paradox

Sulphur oxide (SOx) emissions form sulphate aerosols and while these increase human health risks, they have another less discussed side-effect: sulphates formed by ships burning HSFO contribute a cooling effect, both directly by reflecting energy back into space, and indirectly by interacting with clouds and making them brighter so they reflect more sunlight away from the Earth. A paper published in the journal Nature in February 2018 estimated that implementation of the 2020 sulphur limit for ships would result in approximately 75% reduction in shipping SOx emissions globally. This meant policymakers "face trade-offs whereby achieving human health benefits may be associated with climate change," the paper said. Its authors included several renowned academics from the US and the Finnish Meteorological Institute.

A more recently released study into this phenomenon, led by researchers from Imperial College London, together with University College London and the University of Oxford concluded that sulphate aerosols have the most significant impact on cloud formation compared to other components of ship exhaust. The team studied more than 17,000 ship tracks from satellite observations and matched them to the movements of individual ships using their onboard GPS. The study was able to assess the impact of the introduction of the 0.10% sulphur limit in emission control areas (ECAs) where the researchers found that "ship tracks nearly completely disappeared compared to before the restrictions, under similar weather conditions."

The most publicised part of the study's finding was the observation that it might be possible to monitor compliance with the 0.50% sulphur limit because ships burning HSFO "create a measurable difference in the satellite-observed cloud properties." This could indeed be a useful tool on the high seas where compliance monitoring is tricky.

The study notes that the impact of aerosols on cloud properties "is one of the leading uncertainties in the human forcing of the climate" and the team behind it want to find out how to predict more accurately the influence of sulphur aerosols on cloud formation on a larger scale to feed into climate models.

Does this mean that the IMO will reconsider the global sulphur cap because of the climate change impact? At MEPC 70, IBIA proposed that a "global ECA" covering all countries' shores could improve coastal air quality to a similar extent as a global cap and also reduce overall global warming by allowing continued use of HSFO out on the high seas. It wasn't the first time this idea has been mooted, and it might not be the last, but it would require a major revision of MARPOL Annex VI which is complex and time-consuming. There was no time for that at MEPC 70, which was under huge political pressure to ensure the 0.50% sulphur limit would enter into force in 2020. The key concern was to improve the life expectancy of populations affected by air pollution from ships. Sometimes medicine comes with undesirable side effects, but as long as the benefits outweigh them, the prescription won't change..

hellenicshippingnews.com



Accélération de l'époque pour faire du port de la Spezia et de sa nouvelle troport la première ZFD
La Spezia
Ils demandent des agents maritimes, des douaniers et des transitaires.
Service d'acheminement aérien et passagers dans les ports d'Olbia et du Golfe Aranci
Cagliari
Il sera géré par les Services Fiduciaires Roman Italpol
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Tarente
Les charges à l'atterrissage ont diminué de -21,0% et celles à l'embarquement de -8,7%
Cette année, le forum national de transport de fret ferroviaire Mercintrain aura lieu à Padoue.
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Il aura lieu dans le cadre de la Green Logistics Expo.
Inauguré à Safaga, en Égypte, une usine de construction de remorqueur
Safaga
Dix unités navales seront mises en service pour l'Autorité du canal de Suez
LES DÉPARTS
Visual Sailing List
Départ
Destination:
- liste alphabétique
- liste des nations
- zones géographiques
Nouveau service Italie-Libye-Égypte de Tarros et Messine
La Spezia / Gênes
Elle sera inaugurée à la mi-juin et sera réalisée avec deux navires.
Demain PSA Venise ouvrira le terminal vénitien à la communauté portuaire et à la ville
Venise
Hannibal envisage d'activer un lien ferroviaire entre l'Italie, la Hongrie et la Roumanie
Melzo
Deux rotations hebdomadaires seront inaugurée d'ici la fin de 2024.
Approuvé le budget contemportif 2023 de l'AdSP de Tirreno central
Naples
Annunziata: les années à venir, les fondamentaux pour finaliser l'investissement européen du PNRR
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Hong Kong
La société chinoise réagit à la croissance de la demande
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Joy Tauro
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Helsinki
Au cours des trois premiers mois de 2024, les revenus ont chuté de -1,7%.
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La tendance négative de la performance économique de l'ONE continue, moins marquée.
Singapour
Au cours des trois premiers mois de 2024, les marchandises dans les conteneurs transportés par la flotte ont augmenté de 15,6%
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Le "Jolly Verde" est un porte-conteneurs de 6 300 teu
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Le mercredi, le OK du Parlement européen
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Recettes en baisse de -1,8%
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Nouvelles engagements au Jiangsu New Yangzi Shipbuilding Co.
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Aucun dommage au navire et à l'équipage
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Ancône
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Hyvinkää
Grimaldi a pris livraison du ro-ro multifonction Grande Abidjan
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C'est le quatrième des six navires de classe "G5".
Attributs de Baltimore pour le propriétaire et l'opérateur du navire Dali Responsable de l'effondrement du pont clé
Baltimore
Il aurait été établi une dysfonction du bloc d'alimentation à bord, ce qui entraînerait une panne d'électricité.
Grimaldi et IMAT ont renouvelé l'accord de cinq ans pour la formation des équipages
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Mettre l'accent sur les nouvelles technologies installées à bord des navires
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Hédéhusène
Au premier trimestre de cette année, la valeur du bénéfice net a diminué de -27,2%
Approuvé le budget contemportif 2023 de l'AdSP de la mer de Sardaigne
Cagliari
Un excédent d'administration de 530 millions d'euros, dont plus de 475 pour des travaux en cours
Les importations américaines de marchandises dangereuses ont été pénalisées pendant la pandémie.
Washington
Sondage du Bureau de la responsabilisation du gouvernement
En 2023, l'Interport de CEPIM-Parma a enregistré une croissance de 6,8% de la valeur de la production
Bianconèse de Fontevivo
Bénébénéfice net di788mila euro (+ 223,2%)
PORTS
Ports Italiens:
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Augusta Gioia Tauro Salerne
Bari La Spezia Savone
Brindisi Livourne Taranto
Cagliari Naples Trapani
Carrara Palerme Trieste
Civitavecchia Piombino Venise
Interports Italiens: liste Ports du Monde: Carte
BANQUE DES DONNÉES
Armateurs Réparateurs et Constructeurs de Navires
Transitaires Fournisseurs de Navires
Agences Maritimes Transporteurs routiers
MEETINGS
Demain à Livourne une conférence sur l'histoire du port de la ville
Livourne
On parlera de l'architecture, du commerce et de la politique entre le XVI et le XXe siècle.
Le 11 avril, la sixième édition des "Journées italiennes des ports" commencera.
Rome
Cette année aussi, le projet a été divisé en deux séances: la première au printemps et la deuxième du 20 septembre au 20 octobre.
››› Archives
REVUE DE LA PRESSE
Iran says MSC Aries vessel seized for 'violating maritime laws'
(Reuters)
Le transport maritime national navigue à vue
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››› Index Revue de la Presse
FORUM des opérateurs maritimes
et de la logistique
Relazione del presidente Mario Mattioli
Roma, 27 ottobre 2023
››› Archives
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Bénénet net de -41,3%
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Elle sera renommée avec le nom de "Grenching Futura"
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Inauguration des bureaux de la Grimaldi Shipping Agency Shanghai
Approuvé le budget contemportif 2023 de l'AdSP de la mer de Ligure occidentale
Gênes
La nouvelle dotation de l'usine biologique de l'institution prévoit 50 embauches, dont trois postes de direction
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Il a été installé à l'emplacement de Stagnoni.
Accord entre le SMC, la Fondation du SMC et les navires Mercy pour la construction d'un nouveau navire hospitalier
Genève / Lindale
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Livourne
On parlera de l'architecture, du commerce et de la politique entre le XVI et le XXe siècle.
Accord Assarpowners-ITS Academy G. Caboto pour la formation dans les secteurs maritime, portuaire et logistique
Rome
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Le trafic dans l'ensemble des biens a augmenté de 3,3%
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En mars, l'augmentation était de 15,7%.
Les Spezia et Carrara tentent de décomposer les clochers et de solliciter la coopération dans les ports de Gênes et de Savone
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Les syndicats ont demandé des éclaircissements sur l'avenir des 330 membres de l'Agence des travailleurs portuaires de Tarente.
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Los Angeles
Poursuite de la tendance positive
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Zurich
Les nouvelles commandes sont en baisse de -5,0%. À la fin de juillet, Rosengren quittera le poste de PDG de Wierod
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Salerne
USB Mare et Porti, ce qui se passe dans le port de Salerno est le résultat de la pression des armateurs
Euronav vend sa propre société de gestion de navires à Anglo-Eastern
Anvers / Hong Kong
Gère la flotte des navires-citernes de l'entreprise d'Anvers
Gênes Shipbuilding Industries a acquis une barge submersible de la capacité de chargement de 14 000 tonnes
Gênes
Il peut également être employé comme un bassin flottant pour les artefacts d'une hauteur de 9 800 tonnes.
Venise Cold Stores & Logistics obtient la qualification de l'entrepôt fiscal pour les vins et les pétillants
Venise
Extension des services offerts aux entreprises du secteur vitivinicole
Gasparate exhorte à exemper les biens des interports du paiement de l'Imu
Nola
Le Président de l'Union Interports Reunis a averti qu'avec les chantiers de construction de la PNRR, l'intermodalité des chemins de fer est menacée
Hapag-Lloyd prévoit des investissements futurs pour développer les activités dans les secteurs terminaux et intermodes
Hambourg
Parmi les marchés, l'entreprise met l'accent sur l'Afrique, l'Inde, l'Asie du Sud-Est et le Pacifique
Mise en place d'un consortium pour la décarbonisation des transports sur la route du Pacifique Nord
Vancouver
Il est formé par neuf entreprises et entités et est ouvert à d'autres partenaires
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Long Beach
En mars, l'augmentation était de 8,3%.
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