IMO Archives - Page 17 of 24 - SHIP IP LTD

China’s new low-sulphur fuel oil (LSFO) futures contract made strong gains in its debut trade on Monday, rising as much as 16.7% on the Shanghai International Energy Exchange (INE).

The front-month January contract, with a listing price of 2,368 yuan per tonne, later pared gains to close 9.8% higher at 2,599 yuan ($367.35) per tonne at the close of afternoon trade.

The contract saw open interest of 24,859 lots and trading volumes of 130,439 lots.

The launch of the contract with sulphur content lower than 0.5% comes after an International Maritime Organization (IMO) ruling which bans ships from using high sulphur content fuel oil this year unless equipped with exhaust scrubbers.

The contract could help boost China’s ambition to build a regional bunkering hub in its port of Zhoushan to vie for the multi-billion dollar ship fuel market dominated by Singapore.

Prices for LSFO futures jumped as the market felt its listing price, set by the Shanghai exchange, was undervalued and came below Zhoushan’s spot prices and Singapore’s 0.5% marine fuel prices, said Jin Xiao, chief analyst for energy and petrochemicals at Orient Futures research unit.

“Considering that the long-term curve of Singapore’s low-sulphur is in a contango structure, we think it is more reasonable for LSFO prices to have a premium to Zhoushan spot prices,” he said.

Contango is a situation where the futures price of a commodity is higher than the spot price.

Open to international investors, the LSFO contract is China’s fifth internationalized one following the opening up of crude oil, TSR 20 rubber, iron ore and purified terephthalic acid futures to foreign participants.

“LSFO prices will see limited declines mainly due to the fact that the most serious impact of the coronavirus epidemic on the economy has ended, demand will gradually recover,” Jin added.

A Shanghai-based trader who traded the contract said whether or not LSFO’s prices could sustain would depend on the demand and supply of the marine fuel.

“In the short term, it will depend on crude oil, which is expected to trend slightly higher.”

($1 = 7.0750 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Muyu Xu in Beijing and Emily Chow; Editing by Tom Hogue and Amy Caren Daniel)


A significant step has been made to protect seafarers’ health and safety amid the COVID-19 pandemic, with IMO Secretary-General Kitack Lim’s endorsement of a series of recommendations designed to ensure seafarers can access medical care ashore quickly and safely.

Receiving medical care ashore can be a matter of life or death for seafarers who fall ill while working on ships. But since the beginning of the pandemic, there have been cases of seafarers being denied permission to go ashore, even when they presented medical issues that were life-threatening but not related to COVID-19, including a stroke (read more here).

The Recommendations for port and coastal States on the prompt disembarkation of seafarers for medical care ashore during the COVID-19 pandemic (download here) seek to address this issue. Developed by a broad cross section of global industry associations in consultative status with IMO, they provide guidance to the relevant authorities in port and coastal States so they can ensure seafarers’ access to medical care. This covers any medical situation but also when a suspected or confirmed case of COVID-19 is involved.

The recommendations include advice on monitoring for signs or symptoms of COVID-19 prior to disembarkation, isolation of suspected or confirmed cases, the use of personal protective equipment (PPE), and minimizing the exposure to infrastructures and personnel in the port during disembarkation and transfer to a medical facility.

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IMO Secretary-General Kitack Lim urged Member States to implement the recommendations and share them with the relevant authorities.

“Seafarers are at the heart of everything IMO does. In the darkest hours of the pandemic, they have been selflessly delivering the goods we all need. But their own health and wellbeing are as important as that of anyone else. Now is time for governments around the world to deliver for seafarers, by ensuring they can access medical care without delay, whenever they need it”, Mr. Lim said.

Under the International Labour Organization’s Maritime Labour Convention (MLC), port States must ensure that seafarers on board ships in their territory who are in need of immediate medical care are given access to medical facilities on shore. The obligation to render assistance to seafarers in distress, including medical assistance, is also enshrined in the IMO Safety of Life at Sea (SOLAS), Maritime Search and Rescue (SAR), Salvage and Facilitation conventions, as well as in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS).

Prompt and efficient disembarkation of seafarers to receive medical care ashore is essential not only for the seafarers’ health, but also for the maintenance of the global supply chain. Due to COVID-related restrictions, ships have faced difficulties arranging for such disembarkation, causing delays or disruptions to their operations and potential danger to the seafarers themselves.

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The Recommendations for port and coastal States on the prompt disembarkation of seafarers for medical care ashore during the COVID-19 pandemic were developed by ICS, IAPH, BIMCO, IFSMA, INTERTANKO, P&I Clubs, CLIA, INTERCARGO, InterManager, IPTA, IMCA, INTERFERRY, FONASBA, ITF and WSC.

Read more: WISTA International Signs MOU With The International Maritime Organisation, IMO

Since May, IMO has been urging its Member States to implement the Recommended framework of protocols for ensuring safe ship crew changes and travel during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic, which were also drawn up by industry associations. These protocols specifically ask governments to designate seafarers as key workers and to do everything possible to allow crew changes to happen. Implementing these protocols remains vital, as hundreds of thousands of seafarers remain stranded on ships, having worked for several months beyond their original contracts, or, conversely, stuck onshore, unable to join ships and work.
Source: IMO


A new report from Environmental Defense Fund and University Maritime Advisory Services (UMAS) has argued that the International Maritime Organization should follow the lead taken by the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) in promoting the move to sustainable fuels and accounting for emissions.

Specifically, the report looks at how elements of the ICAO’s market-based climate programme, the Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA), could be adopted in the context of shipping.  According to Environmental Defense Fund, ICAO’s sustainable aviation fuels (SAF) framework offers a ‘solid blueprint for the shipping sector’ – but the report also identifies areas where the IMO ‘should be more ambitious than ICAO to ensure that shipping transitions away from fossil fuels’.

Aoife O’Leary, Director with the Environmental Defense Fund, commented: ‘The International Maritime Organization and the shipping industry need to put in place the right rules for alternative fuels to truly drive the decarbonisation of the sector and it does not need to start from scratch. The rules recently adopted by ICAO offer valuable lessons and a good starting place for the IMO to chart its course toward a genuinely sustainable shipping sector.’

The report’s key recommendations include:

  • Shipping must adopt a full lifecycle perspective, accounting for all greenhouse gas emissions, including methane, and ensure accurate calculations of both the direct and indirect impacts of emissions associated with the whole supply chain (extraction/production, transport/distribution and combustion) of the fuel.

Environmental Defense Fund said that this would be a ‘complex task’, but maintained that ‘ICAO has successfully done it for aviation and the IMO can use this work to jump-start its own progress’.

  • Careful rules must be applied to ensure that the use of biofuels has a real climate benefit. Shipping must ensure that biofuels are not automatically granted a zero-emission status.

Environmental Defense Fund said this was necessary as not all ‘biofuels’ are equally green.

‘The CORSIA framework sets out explicit rules for calculating emissions reductions for each biofuel pathway,’ explained Environmental Defense Fund. ‘It does not automatically allow all biofuels to claim zero carbon combustion emissions (as some other emissions accounting systems have done), as their lifecycle emissions can in some cases approach or even exceed those of petroleum fuels.

‘The report warns the IMO not to create perverse incentives which could promote fuels that could worsen the climate crisis.’

Dr Nishatabbas Rehmatulla, Senior Researcher, UCL and Principal Consultant, UMAS, commented: ‘Using the most appropriate science is key to making the right decisions for our environment. Shipping, as aviation, should ensure that all the emissions from a fuel – from the production to the distribution to the combustion itself – are accounted for if we are to understand the real climate impact. A meaningful policy must incentivise a fair, sustainable and non-perverse shift away from fossil and avoid the risk that emissions are simply shifted elsewhere. Getting this right is mission critical to the shipping industry’s decarbonisation pathway.’

The  report also call on the IMO to:

  • Adopt strict rules on transparency to ensure that shipping companies accurately report their emissions, and don’t double count emission reductions.
  • Allocate adequate resources and draw on the experience and lessons learned from ICAO, where appropriate, to get these rules right.

A full copy of the report can be download here.

The Environmental Defense Fund will be contributing an article about this report in the forthcoming August/September issue of the Bunkerspot magazine. 

 

Source: bunkerspot


Recently the International Maritime Organization (IMO), the shipping agency of the United Nations, issued new rules aiming to reduce sulphur emissions, due to which ships are opting for newer blends of fuels.

What are the new rules of IMO?

  • It has banned ships from using fuels with a sulphur content above 0.5 per cent, compared with 3.5 per cent previously. Because sulphur oxides (SOx), which are formed after combustion in engines, are known to cause respiratory symptoms and lung disease, while also leading to acid rain.
  • The new limits are monitored and enforced by national authorities of countries that are members of the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL) Annex VI.
  • As per the new policy, only ships fitted with sulphur-cleaning devices, known as scrubbers, are allowed to continue burning high-sulphur fuel.
  • Alternatively, they can opt for cleaner fuels, such as marine gas oil (MGO) and very low-sulfur fuel oil (VLSFO).

Impact of the move

The new regulations, called IMO 2020, have been regarded as the biggest shake-up for the oil and shipping industries in decades. It affects more than 50,000 merchant ships worldwide.

A brief note on The International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL)

  • MARPOL is the main international convention covering prevention of pollution of the marine environment by ships from operational or accidental causes.
  • The MARPOL Convention was adopted on 2 November 1973 at IMO.
  • The Convention includes regulations aimed at preventing and minimizing pollution from ships – both accidental pollution and that from routine operations – and currently includes six technical Annexes. Special Areas with strict controls on operational discharges are included in most Annexes.
  • Annex VI of the Convention: Prevention of Air Pollution from Ships (entered into force 19 May 2005)
    • It sets limits on sulphur oxide and nitrogen oxide emissions from ship exhausts and prohibits deliberate emissions of ozone-depleting substances; designated emission control areas set more stringent standards for SOx, NOx and particulate matter.
    • A chapter adopted in 2011 covers mandatory technical and operational energy efficiency measures aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions from ships.Source: manifestias

Not for the first time in recent weeks shipping has been urged to take a leaf out of the aviation playbook in terms of how it tackles its carbon footprint.

Shipping, as aviation, should ensure that all the emissions from a fuel – from the production to the distribution to the combustion itself – are accounted for if we are to understand the real climate impact

A new 28-page report issued today by Environmental Defense Fund and the influential University Maritime Advisory Services (UMAS) states that shipping will fail to tackle its global greenhouse gas emissions unless it puts in place rules that truly reflect the climate impact of shipping fuels.

The report is the first of its kind to explore whether the processes for delivering rules for sustainable marine fuels can be sped up using lessons learnt from aviation, a sector facing similar challenges in transitioning to sustainable alternative fuels.

The report considers how sustainable aviation fuels (SAF) or eligible fuels elements of the International Civil Aviation Organization’s (ICAO’s) market-based climate program, the Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA), could be adopted in the context of shipping. The analysis shows that ICAO’s SAF framework offers a solid blueprint for the shipping sector. The report also identifies areas where the IMO should be more ambitious than ICAO to ensure that shipping transitions away from fossil fuels.

“The International Maritime Organization and the shipping industry need to put in place the right rules for alternative fuels to truly drive the decarbonisation of the sector and it does not need to start from scratch. The rules recently adopted by ICAO offer valuable lessons and a good starting place for the IMO to chart its course toward a genuinely sustainable shipping sector,” said Aoife O’Leary, director with the Environmental Defense Fund.

In the absence of robust accounting rules, the climate benefit of alternative fuels can be completely undermined, the report warns. Shipping must adopt a full lifecycle perspective, accounting for all greenhouse gas emissions, including methane – a likely swipe at LNG, and ensure accurate calculations of both the direct and indirect impacts of emissions associated with the whole supply chain (extraction/production, transport/distribution and combustion) of the fuel.

The study calls for the application of careful rules to ensure that the use of biofuels has a real climate benefit.

“Shipping must ensure that biofuels are not automatically granted a zero-emission status,” the report states.

The CORSIA framework in aviation sets out explicit rules for calculating emissions reductions for each biofuel pathway. It does not automatically allow all biofuels to claim zero carbon combustion emissions as some other emissions accounting systems have done, as their lifecycle emissions can in some cases approach or even exceed those of petroleum fuels.

The report warns the IMO not to create perverse incentives which could promote fuels that could worsen the climate crisis.

“Using the most appropriate science is key to making the right decisions for our environment. Shipping, as aviation, should ensure that all the emissions from a fuel – from the production to the distribution to the combustion itself – are accounted for if we are to understand the real climate impact. A meaningful policy must incentivise a fair, sustainable and non-perverse shift away from fossil and avoid the risk that emissions are simply shifted elsewhere. Getting this right is mission critical to the shipping industry’s decarbonisation pathway,” said Dr Nishatabbas Rehmatulla, senior researcher at UCL and principal consultant for UMAS.

The authors also call on the IMO to adopt strict rules on transparency to ensure that shipping companies accurately report their emissions, and don’t double count emission reductions.

The topic of aviation and maritime joining forces to develop new clean fuels was brought up during Capital Link’s digital forum last month by Knut Ørbeck-Nilssen, the CEO of DNV GL Maritime.

Esben Poulsson, chairman of the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS), commented that shipping had had close dialogue with the International Air Transport Association (IATA) during the crew change crisis.

“I found them very, very responsive and quick to come back to us,” Poulsson said, adding: “I think in the future there could be some cooperation and collaboration with the airline industry.”

Splash also reported last month how a front-runner for the next generation of green fuel for the aviation industry could be used for ships.

Oslo-headquartered Norsk e-Fuel is a newly-established industry consortium building Europe’s first commercial plant for hydrogen-based renewable aviation fuel.

The group comprises German power-to-liquid specialist Sunfire, Zurich-based carbon capture expert Climeworks, engineering, procurement and construction company Paul Wurth and green investor Valinor, which owns Norway’s largest private wind power developer Norsk Vind.

Norsk e-Fuel will make use of Sunfire and Climeworks’ technologies to build plants that will convert into syngas renewable electricity, water and carbon dioxide (CO2) captured from ambient air and unavoidable CO2 sources. This syngas will be used for the production of renewable fuels through further processing and refining.

The first such facility is planned to open at the Heroya Industry Park in Porsgrunn by 2023 with an initial capacity to produce 10m litres of renewable fuel per year. There are plans to expand it to 100m litres annually by 2026.

Source: splash247

The bunker fuel supply and availability landscape changed when the IMO’s regulation capping the global fuel sulphur limit at 0.50% was enforced from 1 January 2020. While the technological solutions are many, decisions are hard to take.

Following an availability review of compliant low-sulphur fuel oil in 2020, the IMO decided that the global fuel sulphur limit of 0.50% was to enter into force in 2020. This requirement is in addition to the 0.10% sulphur limit in the North American, US Caribbean, North Sea and Baltic Sulphur Emission Control Areas (SECAs). Vessels that have exhaust gas cleaning systems installed are still allowed to use high-sulphur fuel oil (HSFO).

Global Sulphur Cap Regulatory overview

Regulatory overview

New amendments ban high sulphur fuels without using scrubbers

A significant amendment to the regulation is the carriage ban for HSFO as of 1 March 2020, from which ships equipped with scrubbers are exempted. While it’s still permitted to carry HSFO as a cargo, it’s no longer permitted to have HSFO in fuel tanks unless scrubbers are installed. This enables port state control (PSC) to detain ships carrying non-compliant fuel without having to determine if it has been used or not. Certain ports have banned the use of open-loop scrubbers within their areas. For an overview on local wash water restrictions, please see the map on the Alternative Fuel Insight (AFI) platform (Link)

Regional sulphur limits vary

The European Union Sulphur Directive stipulates a maximum of 0.10% sulphur content for ships in EU ports. In certain EU countries, the Water Framework Directive constrains the discharge of scrubber water. Belgium and Germany have prohibited the discharge of scrubber water in many areas, constraining the operation of open-loop scrubbers. Other EU countries may follow suit, with no common EU practice likely to be agreed.

In China, as of 1 January 2020 vessels operating in the Inland ECAs (Yangtze and Xijiang River) shall use fuel with a sulphur content not exceeding 0.10% sulphur. The same will apply within the Hainan Coastal ECA from 1 January 2022. In addition, discharging wastewater from scrubbers is banned within inland Emission Control Areas (ECAs), port waters and the Bohai Bay waters.

California’s Air Resources Board (ARB) enforces a 0.10% sulphur limit within 24 nautical miles of the California coast. The regulation does not allow any other compliance options than low-sulphur marine gas or diesel oil (DMA or DMB). A temporary research exemption may be granted, allowing the use of a scrubber. The application must be sent before entering California waters. After a formal review of the regulation, California legislators have decided to retain it as an addition to the ECA requirements. Both sets of regulations must be complied with when calling at port in California.

There is a general global trend of stricter local air pollution regulations coming into play.

Source: dnvgl


Chinese refiners have the capacity to produce 18.1 million tonnes of low-sulphur fuel oil (LSFO) this year, which would make the country self-sufficient in the new shipping fuel, an official with state major PetroChina said on Monday.

China has been striving to reduce its reliance on bunker fuel imports and is aiming to create its own marine fuel hub to supply northern Asia.

About 20 refineries, mostly under state-run Sinopec Corp, PetroChina, CNOOC and Sinochem, installed equipment to produce 0.5% sulfur fuel that meets International Maritime Organization (IMO) rules that came into force at the start of this year.

China will be able to produce 22.6 million tonnes of the IMO-compliant fuel in 2021, rising to 29.6 million tonnes in 2022, Zhang Tong, a vice president of PetroChina International said at the debut of an LSFO futures contract on the Shanghai International Energy Exchange.

Zhang said if China fully releases the production capacity, the country would well be self-sufficient in supplying its bonded marine fuel market, which serves international shipping, estimated at about 12 million tonnes a year.

Before 2020, China imported almost all its bonded bunker supplies of high sulfur fuel oil from regional exporters such as Singapore and South Korea.

By close of morning trade,the front-month INE LSFO contract ended the session 10.5% higher at 2,617 yuan ($369.83) per tonne, with open interest of 19,842 lots, each of 10 tonnes.

China’s second oil product open to foreign investment after Shanghai crude oil, the new marine fuel futures is expected to attract strong investor interest from the oil industry, financial institutions and retail investors.

Source: marinelink


The IMO’s lower sulphur limit for marine fuels effects good or bad for the shipping industries, countries and other groups. Advantages of IMO 2020 are making strongest benefits of public health and encourage development of green power generation. However, It also brings about adverse effects: Large majority of commercial fleet in the world will switch from high sulphur fuel oil (HSFO) to marine gas oil (MGO) or distillates, resulting in high pressure to refiner to increase crude oil to maximize distillate, increasing distillate prices. It is expected that the potential cost of compliant fuel for IMO 2020 will be a big difference from cost of HSFO, creating ship-owners to install scrubbers on board or using alternative fuel like blended fuels or switch to LNG. Therefore, the estimating implications of one option decision for the IMO 2020 on changing the maritime activities will be discussed by using thematic analysis combined with PLEETS analysis through different aspects (Figure 1).

Possible implications

Firstly, the changes in the geographical aspect after implement of the Kra Canal, which are new maritime routes can be developed. They are for instance: Northern region (Hai Phong port) – Hon Khoai – Kra – Middle East/Europe; Central region (Van Phong port) – Hon Khoai – Kra – Middle East/Europe; Southern region (Ba Ria – Vung Tau) – Hon Khoai – Kra – Middle East/Europe. Vietnam has a priority strategy for developing international gateway port for vessels of larger than 100,000 DWT in Hai Phong, Ba Ria – Vung Tau and Khanh Hoa, developing comprehensive navigation facilities in all channel systems. Interestingly, Hon Khoai Project was approved by Vietnam’s Prime Minister that it would build a deep-water seaport, named Hon Khoai Port, on the Southeast of Hon Khoai Island 15 km off the coast of Ca Mau province. According to the opinions of various experts, Hon Khoai Port will be invested to become the largest seaport in Vietnam, making the main link, opening new gateway connection port of global goods and services in Vietnam, especially coal, petroleum and container. The “Investment report on Hon Khoai general seaport project”, prepared by VIP, determined the total estimated investment of US$ 5 billion, of which US$ 3.5 billion for the “super port” and US$ 1.5 billion for the logistics. It is expected that the Hon Khoai Port will have the capacity to transport 800 million tons of cargo each year.

Secondly, after developing the Kra Canal, the geographical advantage of the Hon Khoai Port, it is predicted that the Hon Khoai Port will be one of the target destinations that will go significant benefits from the increase foreign ships calls as global logistics hub for the handling of import and export cargo of Mekong Delta River as well as transhipment cargo.

Currently, Vietnam is enhancing on waterway between Ho Chi Minh City and Ca Mau to facilitate the operations of barges of more than 2,000 tons, upgrading Xa No Canal and the Dai Ngai-Bac Lieu-Gia Rai sea route, modernizing large river ports for containerized goods including Binh Long, An Phuoc, Long Binh and Cai Lay Ports, upgrading project to dredge and expand Cho Gao Canal to 80 meters, etc.

The Hon Khoai Port becomes the new shipping hub as a special trade zone; it attracts investment of various production companies and providing opportunities to business as well as development of regional economy.

Pros and cons implications of option for the IMO 2020

Obviously, four options above also have pros and cons when considering political, legal, economic, environmental, technological and sociological aspect. In this section shows the results of option using LNG and option using blended fuel oil as potential trend of Vietnamese ship-owners.

According to plan for development of the gas industry of Vietnam by 2025 with vision to 2035 (Prime Minister Decision No 60/QD-TTg 2017), research, find markets and accelerate the construction of port infrastructure facilities to be ready to receive and import LNG with the reaching 1–4 billion cubic meter per year in the period of 2021–2015 and reaching 6–10 billion cubic meter per year in the period 2026–2035. Using LNG or sulphur-free fuel for Vietnamese commercial fleet will have both pros and cons implications of new energy. Through a data collection process or direct interviews with experts, the information is showed on the Table 2 as below. It is note that using LNG as alternative fuel oil will be potential development of new ship building which encourage for Vietnam shipping.

Source: tandfonline


The member state delegates of the IMO’s Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC) have formally adopted an amendment to ban the carriage of high sulfur HFO for on-board combustion, except aboard vessels equipped with a scrubber. The move was widely expected, and the regulation will enter into effect on March 1, 2020.

The IMO says that the amendment is intended to support implementation, compliance and port state enforcement of the new IMO fuel sulfur limit, which will cap sulfur content at 0.5 percent beginning in January 2020.

Earlier this week, Bangladesh led an attempt to delay the carriage ban amendment, citing the high cost of low sulfur fuels and concerns about their availability. The proposal was rebuffed by the majority of member states.

Separately, a group of industry associations for the liquid and dry bulk sectors, supported by the largest flag states, asked MEPC to consider a soft rollout for the sulfur cap in order to avoid “unduly penalizing individual ships” for noncompliance. MEPC turned down this proposal on Wednesday.

IMO Secretary General Kitack Lim has repeatedly said that shipping cannot reverse course on the implementation of the limit on fuel sulfur content. High-sulfur fuels form hazardous levels of sulfur oxides (SOx) after combustion. “There is no turning back! The lower global sulphur limit will have a significant beneficial impact on the environment and on human health, particularly that of people living in port cities and coastal communities,” Lim said in February.

The rule is also expected to drive significant price changes in the markets for middle distillates and heavy fuel oil, with implications for the broader transport sector and for consumers.

Source: maritime-executive


The International Maritime Organization (IMO) has announced a changing of the tides, steering 2020 in a new direction, by implementing a regulation that limits the sulphur content of marine fuels from 3.5% to 0.5%, starting 1st January 2020. The only exemption from this industry-wide ban includes fuels burned in Sulphur Emission Control Area or Emission Control Area (SECA or ECA) regions.

There are two basic types of marine fuels — distillate and residual. Distillate fuel, also known as Marine Gas Oil (MGO), is composed of petroleum fractions that are separated from crude oil in a refinery with a distillation process. Residual fuel, or heavy fuel oil (HFO) which are much cheaper than MGO, consists of process residues and has an asphaltene content of between 3% and 10%. The need to switch to and from one of these fuel variants when entering or leaving an ECA poses a range of issues for vessel operators — many of which are still not fully understood by the wider industry.

HFOs are permitted on ships that have exhaust gas cleaning systems known as scrubbers, which removes sulphur oxides and lowers sulphur emissions. The total global demand for fuel oil is roughly seven million barrels per day, with the marine industry responsible for half of residual fuel oil demand. Therefore, this new regulation is having a drastic effect on the availability and the cost of marine fuels.

Navigating the uncharted waters of IMO 2020: Fuel stability and compatibility challengesAn issue of contention arising from this new regulation concerns the compatibility and stability of sulphur-compliant fuels. According to the ISO specification of marine fuels (ISO 8217), fuels are required to have a “homogeneous blend of hydrocarbons derived from petroleum refining,” which is an indication of stability. The stability of a residual fuel is associated with the ability of the asphaltenes to remain in a suspended state. In other words, stability depends on the nature of the hydrocarbons in the fuel. Ideally, bunker residual fuels should be segregated to prevent the agglomeration of the asphaltene contents. During the blending of fuel oils, the uniform dispersion of asphaltenes in the residual fuel can be thrown out of equilibrium, resulting in an unstable dispersion of asphaltenes.

Asphaltene separation, colloquially known as sludge, can be deleterious to ship engines and, therefore, should be avoided to ensure optimal performance. However, during the storage of various fuel oils in bunkers, it is not always feasible to separate the fuels and, consequently, commingling can occur. New fuel formulations are also being made using different fuels with varying sulphur content to adhere to the new sulphur specification. This means the compatibility of commingled fuels is a requirement, making familiarity with these new sulphur-compliant fuels a necessity.

In addition to the global sulphur cap of 2020, a notable amendment to the regulation is the entry into force of a rule to ban the carriage of non-compliant fuel oil effective 1 March 2020. The complementary International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from ships (MARPOL) amendment prohibits the carriage of non-compliant fuel oil for combustion purposes for propulsion or operation on board a ship — unless the ship has an approved scrubber.

While there will still be an allowance to carry HSFO on cargo, it will not be permitted to have HSFO carried in fuel tanks, unless scrubbers are in use. This is for the purpose of enabling port state control to detain ships carrying non-compliant fuel, without having to figure out if it has been used or not. This is to discourage non-compliance when traversing through international waters. There are some ports which have prescribed the use of open-loop scrubbers within their domain.

Open loop scrubbers use seawater to lower the sulphur content of the exhaust gases to an equivalent of 0.10%. The process water is discharged overboard in compliance with IMO 2020 regulations. Open loop systems are primarily used for vessels that operate mainly in the open sea.

The European Union Sulphur Directive designates a maximum of 0.10% sulphur content for ships in EU ports. In certain EU countries, the Water Framework Directive constricts the discharge of scrubber water. In Germany, as well as in Belgium, the discharge of scrubber water in many areas is now verboten, thus preventing the operation of open loop scrubbers. In addition, other EU countries may follow their lead; however, no overarching EU practice is likely to be agreed upon.

Table 1: Fuel Sample DistributionAs of 1st January 2019, China announced that it was expanding the geographical coverage of its 0.50% sulphur area to a 12-nautical mile zone, spanning the entirety of the Chinese coastline, including the special administrative regions of Hong Kong and Macao, and Taiwan. Moreover, discharging wastewater from scrubbers is outlawed within inland ECAs, port waters and the Bohai Bay waters. A total embargo on open-loop scrubbers from the country’s ECA may also be enacted at a later date.

The California Air Resources Board (CARB) invokes a 0.10% sulphur limit within 24 nautical miles of California’s coast. The regulation forbids any other compliance options besides low-sulphur marine gas or diesel oil (DMA or DMB). A transitory research exemption may be given, allowing the use of a scrubber. The application must be submitted before entering California waters. Following a formal review of the regulation, California legislators have made the decision to sustain it as an addition to the ECA requirements. It is compulsory that ships comply with both sets of regulations when calling on a California port.

A widespread global trend is in effect enacting more stringent local air pollution regulations. This is further elucidated by emissions regulations, both already in effect and pending, in areas such as the Panama Canal, Taipei and local municipalities around the globe.

A study was recently conducted by Concawe, which consists of oil and gas companies that operate in Europe to carry out research on environmental issues relevant to the oil industry, to evaluate the effectiveness of several ASTM test methods in predicting the stability and compatibility of sulphur-compliant marine fuels. These test methods include: ASTM D4740, Standard Test Method for Cleanliness and Compatibility of Residual Fuels by Spot Test; ASTM D7157, Standard Test Method for Determination of Intrinsic Stability of Asphaltene-Containing Residues, Heavy Fuel Oils, and Crude Oils (n-Heptane Phase Separation; Optical Detection); ASTM D7112, Standard Test Method for Determining Stability and Compatibility of Heavy Fuel Oils and Crude Oils by Heavy Fuel Oil Stability Analyzer (Optical Detection); and, ASTM D7060, Standard Test Method for Determination of the Maximum Flocculation Ratio and Peptizing Power in Residual and Heavy Fuel Oils (Optical Detection Method).

Table 2: Predicted Stability vs Actual StabilityThe fuels used for this study were: ultra-low sulphur fuel oil (ULSFO), very low sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO), low-sulphur fuel oil (LSFO) and HSFO. By testing the stability of a fuel sample mixture, an indication can be obtained regarding the potential compatibility between the two fuels used in the mixture at a specific ratio. Although, even if two individual residual fuels are found to be stable, the compatibility of the pair of fuels is still inconclusive. Table 1 shows a detailed distribution of the samples and the associated fuel category.

The overall comparison of the performance of ASTM D7157, D7112, and D7060 with ISO 10307-2 (Total sediment in residual fuel oils — Part 2: Determination using standard procedures for ageing) is shown in Table 2. This part of ISO 10307 specifies two procedures — A (thermal) and B (chemical) — for the accelerated ageing of residual fuel oils. When combined with the hot filtration method specified in ISO 10307-1, these procedures permit the prediction of fuel oil stability, as affected by sedimentation, during storage and handling of fuel oils.

The green-shaded areas, orange-shaded areas, and red-shaded areas represent “good”, “poor”, and “bad” predictions, respectively. These predictions are used as an indication of the quality and accuracy of the prediction methodology.

For ASTM D7157 and D7112, predictions agree with TSP evaluation when SBNmix› 1.4INmax. However, when the predictions are in the critical or unstable area, verification with Total Sediment Potential (TSP) is recommended. Predictions from ASTM D7060 agree with TSP evaluation when the p-ratio is greater than 1. Incompatible fuels evaluated from ASTM D7060 should be verified with TSP. Inconsistencies have occurred in the comparison, but the three ASTM test methods can still be useful in predicting the possibility of incompatible fuels.

These new regulations are upending the sphere of marine fuels. In an endeavor to swim with this current, the ECA 0.10% sulphur cap has already generated the development of new low-sulphur fuels. However, the IMO decree to initiate a 0.50% global sulphur cap in 2020 may result in added difficulties regarding engine operation.

The industry has turned to Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) as a potential aid in meeting these new regulations, since LNG can reduce sulphur oxide (SOx) emissions by approximately 90% when compared with HFO. This stark contrast renders LNG an appealing option from a compliance point of view. At first, there were complicating factors at play such as the fact that operators would need to fully weigh the viability of their vessels to carry LNG and ascertain whether they are able to access an available, dependable and economical supply chain. With recent investments, vessels are now able to overcome these factors.

AuthorsConsequently, marine fuels industry professionals and observers are prognosticating a multi-fuel strategy, with LNG augmenting in the future, as opposed to completely supplanting the current fuels of today. What the precise degree of take-up will be remains, at present, unknown as owners and operators assiduously grapple with the possibilities being presented to them for their fleets. There is no “one-size fits all” answer to this challenge. Some factors which will help solidify compliance decisions will need to be considered on an individual basis, include trading routes and age of vessels.

The mega marine engines of ships burn tons of fuel daily. This is necessary to propel these heavily loaded ships. Low-grade fuel oils are typically employed in these gargantuan engines to mitigate the ship’s huge operating expenditures of fuel which can potentially be upwards of 60-70% of the ship’s total operating costs.

New LSFO blends can be mainly aromatic or mainly paraffinic in their compositions, depending on how they are blended and refined. Consequently, due to these disparities, issues of compatibility can arise between different batches when mixed on ships, a process known as commingling. Commingling bunker fuels from divergent origins could produce sludge formations, which can damage engines.

When two incompatible fuels are mixed, another potential issue can occur, asphaltene separation. This is when asphaltenes precipitate and subsequently form sludge on the inside of engine filters and separators. This is undesirable because it can cause a ship to lose its propulsion and auxiliary power. Fuel testing agencies will be gearing up to test compatibility from suppliers at various locations.

Shipowners already have a variety of potential solutions at hand to curb the risk of incompatibility and resultant engine failure. For instance, most buyers will continue using LSFO mixtures which hail from different supplies in their own separate tanks. This is a safety practice which is already widely used when bunkering HSFO blends. The International Bunker Industry Association (IBIA) has admonished shipowners to stave off commingling by segregating tanks to maintain a variety of fuel qualities, adding complexity to a ship’s operation.

Some shipowners, in the interest of foresight, have gotten a head start in preparation for 2020, by already segregating their fuel tanks. Shipowners who possess scrubbers on their vessels will see that their storage tank ratio of LSFO to MGO will most likely continue unchanged into 2020.

At the other end of the spectrum, a subset of shipowners prefer to keep the status quo, maintaining business as usual as they deliberate on how to proceed. Their options include the following: a) convert to 0.5% LSFO, b) install a scrubber or switch to LNG. This waffling has been due in part to a pall of uncertainty surrounding fuel prices, fuel supply and scrubber availability. Shippers have also been eyeing the IMO to glean how strictly the UN agency would enforce the IMO 2020 regulation.

A proposal by various flag states that an experience building phase (EBP) be added to the regulations was defeated at MEPC 73, while recent amendments to Marpol Annex VI will forbid non-scrubbing vessels from carrying more than 0.5% fuel oil on board as of 1st March 2020.

The IMO is ostensibly staunch in its avowal to demand strict compliance to the reduced sulphur cap. Although, as a special agency of the United Nations, the IMO has no real authority to enforce the new regulations itself. Adherence may, ultimately, be market driven. Global customer-facing monoliths such as Walmart and Ikea have a built-in brand-protective interest in demanding that shipping firms comply with the new rules to curtail bad publicity from environmental groups and an ecologically minded public. Failure to comply with the global sulphur cap could also cause a vessel to be deemed “unseaworthy” for insurance purposes.

In practice, the 0.5% global cap will be enforced worldwide by Port State Control (PSC) authorities. At the beginning of April, the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore, which has already banned open loop scrubbers, stated that, from the beginning of 2020, captains and owners of vessels which burn high sulphur fuel within its territorial waters, without utilizing sulphur-reducing technology such as scrubbers, could be sentenced to up to two years in prison.

This is contrary to other flag states outside North America and northwest Europe, which are often low on resources, as well as lacking in commitment to doling out serious penalties. Worldwide, only a small portion of port states have experience in this field. The global average sulphur content of HSFO is 2.7%, which is lower than the current IMO emissions cap of 3.5%. Because of this, compliance has not been on the radar of much of the seafaring world. Prior to 2020, 91 states ratified MARPOL Annex VI. All are required to sanction IMO 2020. Even with that being the case, only 31 already had sulphur regulations in effect with only a paltry 16 being ECA regions. This illustrates a sweeping dearth of experience in administering sulphur regulation compliance. ECA countries are only used to monitoring their own waters and not the vast open sea. This is the impetus buttressing the new legislation banning all vessels without scrubbers from transporting HSFO starting March 1.

It is recommended that buyers who intend to commingle the new fuels should conduct compatibility tests to start with. The preferred method for achieving this is the ASTM D4740 spot test. This is a tool of analysis to scope out possible commingling conflicts between grades. Shipowners can also choose to make use of any of the several fuel additives available to reduce sludge formation.

As with any new changes, there are sure to be some growing pains and learning curves, especially concerning incompatibility between new LSFO and distillate blends. However, with the proper tools and knowledge, shipowners should not commingle them with any more regularity than they did HSFO blends in prior years. Once these new regulations are acclimated to, vessels should continue to enjoy smooth sailing into 2020 and beyond.

Source: fuelsandlubes


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