Abstract

There is a need for alternative fuels in the shipping sector for two main motivations: to deliver a reduction in local pollutants and comply with existing regulation; and to mitigate climate change and cut greenhouse gas emissions. However, any alternative fuel must meet a range of criteria to become a viable option. Key among them is the requirement that it can deliver emissions reductions over its full life-cycle. For a set of fuels, comprising both conventional and alternative fuels, together with associated production pathways, this paper presents a life-cycle assessment with respect to six emissions species: local pollutants sulphur oxides, nitrogen oxides, and particulate matter; and greenhouse gases carbon dioxide, methane, and nitrous oxide. While the analysis demonstrates that no widely available fuel exists currently to deliver on both motivations, some alternative fuel options have the potential, if key barriers can be overcome. Hydrogen or other synthetic fuels rely on decarbonisation of both energy input to production and other feedstock materials to deliver reductions in greenhouse gas emissions. Similarly, bio-derived fuels can be an abatement option, but only if it can be ensured that land-use change whilst growing biomass does not impact wider potential savings and the sector is able to compete sufficiently for their use. These examples show that crucial barriers are located upstream in the respective fuel life-cycle and that the way to overcome them may reside beyond the scope of the shipping sector alone.

Highlights

  • Climate change is an inherently global issue

  • Whilst liquefied natural gas (LNG) reduces CO2 emissions compared to the conventional fossil fuels, emissions in terms of CO2e are about equal

  • The analysis presented here indicates that all alternative fuel options significantly reduce particulate matter (PM) emissions, compared to LSHFO

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Summary

Introduction

Climate change is an inherently global issue. The Paris Agreement recognises it as an urgent threat and sets the mitigation goal of limiting the global temperature increase to well below 2 C and ideally below 1.5 C. As international shipping (together with international aviation) has been excluded from the Paris Agreement, the IMO developed a roadmap for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions, with the aim of defining the sector's strategy and its role in supporting the Paris Agreement. It seeks to assess opportunities for greenhouse gas reductions, explicitly including alternative fuels. As detailed above, there is the longer-term need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions This defines important criteria for an ideal choice of fuel and raises the question of alternatives to conventional fuels currently used, namely heavy fuel oil and marine diesel oil (HFO and MDO).

Challenges for alternative fuels
Research goal and questions
Existing studies
Emission scope and functional unit
System definition for alternative fuels
Sensitivity analysis and temporal emission factors
ALCA base case results
Results of the sensitivity analysis
Results of the temporal analysis
Fuel candidates for addressing local pollutants
Fuel candidates for decarbonisation
Conclusions
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