A partnership between ports, carriers, and cargo owners has published an outline of a Green Shipping Corridor Implementation Plan which will accelerate emissions reductions on one of the world’s busiest container shipping routes across the Pacific Ocean.
As part of the historic plan, the carrier partners will begin deploying reduced or zero lifecycle carbon capable ships on the corridor by 2025, and work together to demonstrate by 2030 the feasibility of deploying the world’s first zero lifecycle carbon emission container ships.
The partnership consists of the ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach, and Shanghai while carrier partners include CMA CGM, COSCO Shipping Lines, Maersk, and ONE. Core partners include the Shanghai International Port Group, the China Classification Society, and the Maritime Technology Cooperation Centre of Asia.
The plan is the first of its kind and was developed with support from C40 Cities – a global network of nearly 100 mayors of the world’s leading cities united in action to confront the climate crisis.
Participants of the Green Shipping Corridor Partnership will take steps to reduce carbon emissions and harmful pollutant emissions impacting air quality, through methods such as expanding the use of shore power and supporting the development of clean marine fuelling infrastructure.
Cargo owner partners have set goals to contract with carriers to use zero lifecycle carbon emission shipping services, and to measure progress toward decarbonisation, all partners will develop metrics to track the decarbonisation progress.
Recent Posts
Ammonia
Azane Unveils New Subsidiary to Drive Ammonia Bunkering Development Oslo, Norway
Fuels Heavy oils
Public sector carbon emissions fall to 3.7 mn tonnes in Singapore
Fuels Heavy oils
UltraTech Cement targets to achieve 85% green energy
Fuels LNG
JCB unveils hydrogen combustion technology