4.7 Article

Joint decision of green technology adoption and sailing pattern for a coastal ship under ECAs

Journal

TRANSPORT POLICY
Volume 146, Issue -, Pages 102-113

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.tranpol.2023.10.023

Keywords

Emission control areas; Green technology; Coastal ship; Fuel switch; Scrubber installation

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This study investigates the choice of green fuel and green technology for ships and derives the sufficient and necessary conditions for adopting scrubber installation strategy. The study finds that introducing scrubber technology can reduce evasion behavior of ships but also increase total emissions in coastal areas.
In order to comply with the latest Emission Control Areas (ECAs) regulations, ships must use expensive lowsulphur fuel oil or relatively cheap high-sulphur fuel oil (HFO) with desulphurization equipment. This study investigates the choice of green fuel and green technology for a coastal container ship with endogenous decision of sailing pattern. The sufficient and necessary conditions for a ship to adopt scrubber installation (SI) strategy are derived, which is dependent on factors including the equivalent sailing distance, the fuel price ratio, and scrubber parameters. The case study based on the China's coastal area is conducted. Numerical examples show that the introduction of scrubber technology on coastal vessels will reduce their evasion behavior. However, the increased sulphur reduction efficiency of scrubbers increases the evasion strategies of ships, which will increase the total emissions in coastal areas. The numerical example shows that introduction the scrubber technology to the coastal ships will reduce their evasion behavior. However, the scrubber investment will increase ships' sailing speed, increasing emissions within ECA. Therefore, governments can subsidize high abatement efficiencies of the scrubber to reduce actual ship emissions.

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