Hapag-Lloyd has reached an
agreement with Goldwind, a global partner in clean energy with headquarters in
Beijing, China, for the delivery of 250,000 tonnes of green methanol per year. The green methanol will consist of a blend
of bio- and e-methanol, ensuring greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions reduction of at
least 70 percent, and comply with all current sustainability certification
requirements, according to an official release from Hapag. “As part of our
Strategy 2030, we are fully committed to the 1.5-degree target of the Paris
Agreement and therefore also to sustainable investments," says Rolf Habben
Jansen, CEO, Hapag-Lloyd. "With the agreement, we are securing a
significant proportion of our requirements for green fuels. This will bring us an important step closer
to our goal of achieving net-zero fleet operations by 2045. It is and
remains our ambition to play a leading role in the transformation of the liner
shipping industry."
By 2030,
Hapag-Lloyd aims to reduce the absolute GHG emissions of the fleet by around
one third compared to 2022. Compared
to conventional fuels, the ordered quantity of green methanol can save a total
of up to 400,000 tonnes of CO2e emissions in fleet operations per year, the
release added. Goldwind is planning to build a new green methanol factory
adjacent to its existing project in Hinggan League, China. Meanwhile, Goldwind
will additionally deliver early volume scheduled in 2026. “We are honoured to
have reached this agreement with Hapag-Lloyd," adds Wu Gang, Chairman,
Goldwind. "This collaboration
proves once again that Goldwind can win the trust of one of the most important
shipping companies. We are grateful for the opportunity to become a strong
decarbonisation partner of Hapag-Lloyd, which aims to achieve carbon
neutrality ahead of the shipping-industry targets and aligns closely with
Goldwind’s corporate vision. Goldwind highly values this endorsement and looks
forward to deepening the collaboration." The five 10,100 TEU charter ships
that Hapag-Lloyd and Seaspan are converting to a suitable methanol dual-fuel
propulsion system in 2026 will be powered by green methanol. In addition to the
recent investment decision for 24 new container ships with low-emission
dual-fuel liquefied natural gas engines announced on November 6, the investment in green methanol is
another step in Hapag-Lloyd’s efforts to prepare itself for a multi-fuel future
and to drive the decarbonisation of the liner shipping industry, the
release added.