Journal
ENERGIES
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages -Publisher
MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/en14020278
Keywords
container shipping; emissions; maritime transport; sustainable shipping; green shipping; IMO
Categories
Funding
- University of Gdansk
Ask authors/readers for more resources
Container shipping is the largest emitter within the maritime shipping industry, prompting the implementation of measures such as MARPOL Annex VI and the energy consumption approach to estimate emissions. The energy consumption approach is valuable for ongoing estimation of emission reductions and filling data gaps, supporting early detection of environmental impacts and identification of potential areas for emission reductions in container shipping.
Container shipping is the largest producer of emissions within the maritime shipping industry. Hence, measures have been designed and implemented to reduce ship emission levels. IMO's MARPOL Annex VI, with its future plan of applying Tier III requirements, the Energy Efficiency Design Index for new ships, and the Ship Energy Efficiency Management Plan for all ships. To assist policy formulation and follow-up, this study applies an energy consumption approach to estimate container ship emissions. The volumes of sulphur oxide (SOx), nitrous oxide (NOx), particulate matter (PM), and carbon dioxide (CO2) emitted from container ships are estimated using 2018 datasets on container shipping and average vessel speed records generated via AIS. Furthermore, the estimated reductions in SOx, NOx, PM, and CO2 are mapped for 2020. The empirical analysis demonstrates that the energy consumption approach is a valuable method to estimate ongoing emission reductions on a continuous basis and to fill data gaps where needed, as the latest worldwide container shipping emissions records date back to 2015. The presented analysis supports early-stage detection of environmental impacts in container shipping and helps to determine in which areas the greatest potential for emission reductions can be found.
Authors
I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.
Reviews
Recommended
No Data Available