Ahead of next week’s
SMM, the world’s largest shipping exhibition, DNV has released its latest
Maritime Forecast to 2050, a 72-page publication now in its eighth edition. The in-depth report provides an updated
outlook on regulations, drivers, technologies and fuels needed for maritime
decarbonisation, including four scenarios exploring conditions that could
accelerate the adoption of specific fuels and technologies by 2050. The study
emphasises that regardless of which direction the industry’s decarbonisation
journey takes, it will come at a significant cost. The four simulated scenarios
project these cost increases per transport work; with estimates ranging from
69-75% for bulk carriers, 70-86% for tankers, and 91-112% for container
vessels. “Our latest analyses show that
decarbonising shipping could double the cost of transporting goods by
containers”, said Eirik Ovrum, lead author of Maritime Forecast to 2050.
“Ultimately, the rising costs of seaborne transport will need to be passed down
the value chain and the market is already seeing trends towards shifting these
costs to end-users.”
The whole shipping
supply chain has been debating at events around the world who will pay for the
costs of decarbonisation.
At TPM, container
shipping’s top event, in Long Beach last year, Jeremy Nixon, the CEO of Japanese
liner Ocean Network Express (ONE), told delegates the cost of fuel for
containerships stood at about $1,000 per feu.
“That’s roughly what
the cost component is of using carbon fuel. These new fuels are going to be two
or three times more expensive. So,
potentially $2,000-3,000 will be the future fuel cost of moving a 40-foot
container,” Nixon said.
To reach IMO’s 2030 decarbonisation goals shipping
will need between 7m and 48m tons of carbon-neutral fuels, DNV is forecasting. However, with the global cross-sector production
of carbon-neutral fuels expected to reach only between 44m and 63m tons by
2030, it will be near impossible for shipping to secure its required share, DNV
warned yesterday 29 august.
Unveiling the Maritime
Forecast to 2050, Knut Ørbeck-Nilssen, DNV Maritime CEO, said: “While we are
currently witnessing a slowdown of decarbonisation in shipping, we are entering an era of unprecedented
technological exploration that will drive progress forward. With
carbon-neutral fuels in short supply, smart decision-making and strategic
investments today are crucial to lay the foundations for future emissions
reductions. Prioritising energy
efficiency, leveraging technological solutions, and embracing digitalisation
are key steps towards reducing the extra cost burden and achieving our
decarbonisation goals.”