written by
VICTOR SHIEH

CEOs meet at third virtual conference to discuss maritime decarbonization efforts

Decarbonization Clean Marine Fuels Onshore Power 4 min read

The WPCAP boulder starts to move

“We’re on to something very big at the moment,” stated Allard Castelein, CEO of the Port of Rotterdam Authority, in his closing remarks at the World Ports Climate Action Program (WPCAP) summit for CEO’s and working group delegates. On the 14th of October, Castelein hosted the third virtual conference discussing progress and the way forward to realise the WPCAP’s ultimate aim of combatting climate change in the maritime sector.

The WPCAP network is made up of twelve leading international ports: Antwerp, Barcelona, Gothenburg, Hamburg, HAROPA port of Le Havre, Long Beach, Los Angeles, New York/New Jersey, Rotterdam, Valencia, Vancouver and Yokohama. On behalf of his fellow CEO’s, Castelein was signalling great headway with the WPCAP programme. “As a group of port organisations, we’re committed and passionate to make a difference. And we don’t stop at the level of making promises, we want to deliver. Society at large is expecting this from us.”

One could say that the WPCAP boulder starts to move, and not just one. A clear example is the power-to-ship working group. Starting two years ago with exploring benefits of collaboration in trade lane coalitions, followed by detailing financial benefits, the hope was to reach in 2022 a joint agreement on implementation.

But the ports of Antwerp, Bremerhaven, Hamburg, HAROPA Port and Rotterdam decided to move faster. Already in June this year, the EU Northern Range MOU for ultra large container vessels was signed. Participating ports announced a joint effort focusing on increasing the use of onshore power supply for ships at berth.

Competitiveness of shore power

New in the power-to-ship programme is the so-called ship owners module, providing the opportunity to assess the competitiveness of shore power compared to maritime fuels. The working group also asked a research institute to investigate the role of shore power in the maritime fuel mix. Initial results confirmed that shore power will be long-term cost competitive, especially for the high-power demand vessels such as cruise, container vessels, RoRo and ferries.

The power-to-ship working group also showed the capacity to work together with organisations outside WPCAP, something that is also high on the agenda of the ports network. The WPCAP objective to accelerate decarbonization of ports and shipping and achieve net zero emissions by 2050, will require active and inclusive collaboration with the maritime industry.

At the CEO summit it was agreed to prepare for a greater outreach to collaborate more intensely with international organisations such as Getting to Zero as well as with marine carriers, terminal operators, and regulators. The summit participants were convinced that the time is there to expand inclusive collaboration to realise the overall aim of helping to limit global warming by facilitating net-zero port-related emissions by 2050.

Priority measures

Meanwhile, the efficiency working group is making headway with the 2021 aim to implement a ‘no regret’ measure in a pilot between port, terminal and shipping line. Based on a range of interviews and discussions it has become clear that the priority measures are to optimize speed between ports, improve planning of ships calling at multiple berths in one port, improve ship/berth compatibility through improved data and finally enable ship deadweight optimization.

The working group is scheduled to issue a ship-port interface guide later this year and will then work with IAPH, IHMA and other accredited NGOs in having an IMO paper published to commit to global implementation of efficiency measures that reduce greenhouse gas emissions from shipping.

According to the policy working group, all WPCAP ports are already leaders in implementation of policies, though the added value would be to implement joint measures - taking in mind guiding principles of competition law. A policy inventory is complete, whilst a screening tool is nearing completion. This would help ports to select the most effective air quality and climate change policy for their environment, and it would fuel ongoing work to achieve joint policies which remains the ultimate goals of the working group.

Pilot projects in place

On the topic sustainable fuels for deep-sea vessels, the key focus is on pilot projects. Port of Rotterdam funded a biofuels demonstration in partnership with several parties, the port of Antwerp initiated the order of the world’s first hydrogen-powered tug for its fleet, whilst the Vancouver Fraser Port Authority has partnered with the Province of British Columbia and industry to launch the Clean Technology Initiative, which helps fund the trialing of lower-emission fuels and technologies by port users.

Next steps for the working group are to actively reach to stakeholders on deliverables and connect with international organisations for the development of a guidance document on the introduction of sustainable low carbon marine fuels.

At the end of the session, port CEO’s felt hugely encouraged. “If we showcase the projects to the world and collaborate with a growing number of organisations, we start making a vast impact”, stated Castelein. “We’re on to something very big now. Our network of leading international ports has truly gained critical mass to realise change successfully.”

More info on WPCAP via following links:

Overall info on the initiative: https://sustainableworldports.org/wpcap/

Onshore power: https://sustainableworldports.org/wpcap/wg-3/

Sustainable marine fuels: https://sustainableworldports.org/wpcap/wg-4/

Cargo handling equipment: https://sustainableworldports.org/wpcap/wg-5

Photographer: Kian Lem | Source: Unsplash

Decarbonization Clean Marine Fuels Onshore power