1. Introduction
The recent estimates of the Fourth International Maritime Organisation (IMO) Greenhouse Gas (GHG) Study 2020 [
1] show a troubling message for shipping Greenhouse Gas emissions. There was a 9.6% increase in GHG emissions from 2012 to 2018, mainly due to a continuous increase in global maritime trade. The share of shipping emissions also increased from 2.76% in 2012 to 2.89% in 2018.
The activities of IMO addressing climate change started more than ten years ago by signing a Cooperation Agreement between IMO and the Korea International Cooperation Agency (KOICA) on April 2011 for the implementation of a technical cooperation project on Building Capacities in East Asian countries to address Greenhouse Gas Emissions (GHG) from Ships [
2]. In recent years, numerous resolutions and documents have been adopted [
3] to achieve the ambitious goal of a 50% reduction in the total annual GHG emissions and 70% reduction in
emissions per transport work compared to 2008 by 2050. For the implementation of these goals, several mandatory instruments for new and existing ships have been proposed, such as the MARPOL Annex VI, with the Energy Efficiency Design Index (EEDI) introduced increasingly strict carbon intensity standards for new ships and the Ship Energy Efficiency Management Plan (SEEMP) for operators to improve the energy efficiency of all ships and, additionally, the Energy Efficiency Operational Indicator (EEOI), Energy Efficiency Existing Ship Index (EEXI) and Carbon Intensity Indicator (CII).
Generalisations and guidelines for increasing the energy efficiency of ships have appeared after the first approved requirements [
4]. They were in several groups: Hull form optimisation; Energy-saving devices; Structural optimisation and light-weight construction; Machinery technology; and Fuel efficiency of ships in service. Several examples of structural optimisation and light-weight construction can be seen in [
5,
6,
7,
8,
9] and for control of ship operation due to the generated air pollution by ships in coastal water in [
10,
11,
12,
13].
The development of machine technologies is also related to the introduction of alternative fuels. Even in the early years, special attention was paid to Liquified Natural Gas (LNG) [
14,
15,
16]. The LNG is cleaner than coal or oil and its use as fuel in shipping leads to a reduction in
,
and
emissions. This is of great importance for operations in the Emission Control Area (ECA), where 18.5% of handy-size tankers and small and medium size Ro-Ro spend 80% of their sailing time [
15].
The use of LNG complies with ECA regulations as sulphur oxides emissions are reduced to zero. The nitrogen-oxide emissions are below the Tier III regulation, applicable in ECA from 2016, and it is very low in particles reducing at the same time the carbon dioxide emissions in the range of 20–25% [
16].
A comparison of LNG’s life cycle environmental performance, liquefied biogas (LBG), methanol and bio-methanol are presented in [
17], where four aspects are considered, i.e., technical, economic, environmental and other. The last group are safety and safe handling, availability, public opinion, etc. Although liquefied natural gas or methanol produced from natural gas significantly improves environmental performance, the impact on the climate is of the same order as using heavy fuel. There will be a more significant effect when using methane and methanol produced from biomass.
Alternative fuels, in combination with additional equipment, are an option to meet the requirements of ECA [
18]. A comparison of three alternatives: Heavy Fuel Oil (HFO) combined with a scrubber and a Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR), Marine Gasol (MGO) combined with an SCR and LNG shows that none of them leads to less impact on the climate than heavy fuel. Reducing the methane slip to 2 wt.% (weight percentage) would ensure that LNG has a lower impact on climate change.
Comparison employing the Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) of specific ships operating in a particular area may show an advantage when using one or another fuel. This way, a feeder container ship and a passenger ferry operating between Mainland China and Taiwan are compared [
19]. For both ships, two scenarios are considered with HFO and LNG as fuel. The study indicated possible improvement in total fuel-life cycle GHG emissions from using LNG. The reduction in the emissions of
is (38–39%) and
(42–43%). Remarkable reduction is obtained using LNG in
(99.8%) and
(97.5%), while methane emissions increase significantly when LNG is used as an alternative fuel for both ships.
Comparative studies also appear with the continuous improvement of technologies to produce alternative fuels. A recently presented study [
20] compares seven alternative marine fuels—LNG, liquefied biogas (LBG), methanol from natural gas, renewable methanol, hydrogen for fuel cells produced from (1) natural gas or (2) electrolysis based on renewable electricity, and Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil (HVO), and HFO. Ten performance criteria rank the marine fuels and different stakeholder groups set their relative importance in Sweden. The criteria include economic, environmental, technical and social aspects. Economic criteria are the most important for ship owners, fuel producers and engine manufacturers, while the Swedish government authorities prioritise environmental criteria, specifically GHG emissions. Based on the views of the first group members, LNG is ranked the highest, with HFO second, then the fossil methanol, followed by biofuels. For the second group of stakeholders, hydrogen is ranked highest, followed by renewable methanol and HVO.
The Getting to Zero Coalition [
21] is an alliance of more than 200 companies and organisations from the maritime, energy, infrastructure and financial sectors, supported by governments and international organisations. The goal of the coalition is to bring into operation commercial alternative fuels with zero emissions by 2030, leading to the complete decarbonisation of maritime transport by 2050. To achieve this goal, an S-curve has been defined [
22] according to which, by 2030, scalable zero-emission fuels (SZEF) as hydrogen and hydrogen-derived fuels, such as ammonia, e-methanol and synthetic hydrocarbon, should be 5% of all fuels used, 27% of all fuel used by 2036 and 93% of all fuel used by 2046. Such a pace is needed to meet the goal of the 2016 Paris climate agreement to limit global warming to well below 2, preferably to 1.5 degrees Celsius, compared to pre-industrial levels [
23]. A major obstacle to achieving these goals is the significant price gap between fossil and zero-emission fuels. For example, the estimated production price (EUR/GJ) by 2025 of e-hydrogen, e-ammonia, e-methane and e-methanol is 6 to 7.3 times higher than that of LNG [
24].
A summary of the use of alternative fuels as of 2022 was made by Det Norske Veritas [
25]. Of the total gross tonnage of ships operating today, 5.5% use alternative fuels and one-third (33%) are on order and can work with alternative fuels. The report evaluates 24 scenarios for the maritime energy mix in 2050 among five groups: fossil fuels, biofuels, electro fuels, blue fuels and electricity. A preferred alternative fuel cannot be specified due to uncertainty about the availability of sufficient amounts of biomass for biofuels or sufficient renewable electricity for electric fuel production. In addition, considerable investments in this direction are needed in the coming decades, which are estimated at
$8 billion (bn) USD to
$28 bn USD annually in investment on ships in a transition phase towards decarbonisation in 2050 and about
$28 bn USD to
$90 USD bn per year for onshore to scale up production, fuel distribution and bunkering infrastructure to supply 100% carbon-neutral fuels by 2050 [
25].
There is considerable research on alternative marine fuels’ environmental and economic aspects. A study investigated the cost-effectiveness of Net Present Value (NPV) for the top 20 most frequently calling ships to Irish ports in 2019 [
26]. The highest NPV is obtained for LNG, followed by methanol and green hydrogen. Green hydrogen is the best option concerning decarbonisation targets, although a further reduction in current fuel price is required to improve its cost-competitiveness over LNG and methanol.
Comparative analysis is also based on in situ data [
27]. The data are taken from a Cape-size bulk carrier’s operation between Japan and Australia for 30 months. The findings confirm that using LNG as a marine fuel is highly creditable compared with HFO and HFO +Scrubber variants. Results from environmental assessment of alternative marine fuels, including LNG, could be found in [
28,
29,
30,
31].
As a summary of these studies, the conclusion in [
31] can be accepted, which reads, LNG is the main alternative to marine diesel and heavy fuel oil (MDO and HFO) and could provide a cost-effective reduction in
emissions whilst meeting
and
emissions regulations. However, the greenhouse gas (GHG) benefit is reduced by methane slip, with an overall reduction of 8–20% compared to HFO and MDO’. This conclusion can be confirmed by the number of retrofitted and new build ships using LNG as fuel in recent years [
32].
The first new-build ship using LNG as fuel was an Offshore supply vessel in 2003 and the first retrofitted ship is an Oil/Chemical Tanker in 2011. Both ships operate in the North Sea.
The life-cycle cost assessment must be considered when evaluating the use of alternative fuels, along with the environmental aspects. Although based on one example of a 1500 TEU container ship, it is concluded in [
33] that, in general, LNG-fuelled ships have higher running Operational Expenses (OPEX) and lower Voyage Expenses (VOYEX). A point must be considered the loss of cargo space due to installing LNG tanks onboard.
Recently conducted research [
34] provides valuable information for retrofitting a 300 K DWT VLCC trading from the Arabian Gulf to China. The CAPEX as
$ USD per tonne deadweight (
$/t DW) of competing alternatives is shown in
Table 1.
The opportunity cost is a conservative estimation of the lost charter hire during the 91 day conversion to LNG. The analysis concludes that retrofitting LNG as a marine fuel delivers strong investment returns over the remaining ten years of the VLCC, with returns dependent on relative fuel prices of LNG, HFO and VLSFO. This study introduced the so-called ‘Readers’ Choice’ plot, a drawing for which the reader can select own preferred future fuel price forecasts.
The CII of IMO poses a threat to many VLCC vessels, becoming a stranded asset. Conversion to LNG fuel gives good prospects for these ships. In this case, the LNG alternative maintains a superior rating of B until it slides into C in mid-2027 before finally slipping to D in 2032.
The danger of the vessel overturning in a stranded asset is also analysed in [
35]. The total stranded value depends on the size of the LNG fleet and the transition to SZEF. Getting to Zero Coalition plans are for 5% set by 2030. LNG ships must be able to switch to these alternative fuels; otherwise, they will lose their value and the total amount will be more significant if the switch is delayed, for example, in 2034.
The investment decisions about the retrofitting an ageing ship to mitigate the air pollution and transforming the ship into environmentally friendly are to be made based on an informed judgment on the expected economic benefits and the associated risk. Whether the economic benefit is modelled as net present value, return on capital, internal rate of return or economic added value, the risk of a future project is usually represented by a discount rate that reflects the time value of money, i.e., opportunity cost.
Traditionally, the ship is designed based on a selected economic measure of the transported effectiveness using the Required Freight Rate (RFR) established over the years, as seen in [
36,
37,
38,
39] accounting for direct and indirect costs. The quality of the designed ship is measured by the minimal value of RFR [
37], determining the economic efficiency of the investment project which the ship owner has to get to arrive at the assumed profitability rate of a given investment and operating costs, for the assumed ship service life, where the inflation rate, tax rate and the discounted financial balance accounting for the net present value (NPV) and the capital recovery rate are considered.
The use of NPV as a part of the decision support methods is a widespread practice in engineering design which may be confirmed by the review of the state of the arts in [
40] and in a specific study in [
41,
42,
43,
44,
45], among many others.
The feasibility of retrofitting analysis uses the same fundaments as RFR. It is made through the discounted financial balance, based on the net present value, estimated as the sum of expected future cash flows minus the initial investment. The future cash flow is the difference between the expenditure associated with the VLSFO and LNG fuels.
The economic factors involved in the analysis may differ for different geographical locations and economic and political conditions, which is not essential for the method employed here but is needed for the example presented.
An existing ageing multi-purpose ship is used for the present analysis. The recent economic and political instability showed the importance of LNG as an energy source, especially as a marine fuel for the rapidly expanding fleet. The price of LNG as a ship fuel is highly volatile and proper forecasting requires an adequate method. However, last year, the current LNG fuel market showed a severe LNG price increase [
46].
The price of LNG as fuel depends linearly on the TTF (Title Transfer Facility: The Dutch natural gas market) [
47] and the forecasts of Fitch Ratings for TTF for 2023 are an average of USD
$40/Mcf [
48]. The price was estimated to be USD
$10/Mcf in 2025 from USD
$20 in 2024 and stay at USD
$5.0/Mcf in 2026 and beyond (1 mt LNG = 48,700 Mcf; Mcf = 1000 cubic feet).
Along with the recent European changes regarding carbon trading in shipping, Japan’s proposal at the 78th MEPC session in mid-2022 should also be considered. It applies to a worldwide tax of CO
2 of USD
$56 per tonne in 2025, USD
$135 per tonne in 2030, USD
$324 per tonne in 2035 and a shocking USD
$673 per tonne in 2040 [
49].
The uncertainties originating from the economic conditions are accounted for by employing the extreme value analysis, which can be seen as an approach to assess the cash outflows peaks that can be generated due to unfavourable economic conditions.
2. Retrofitting the Propulsion System
The study performed by ‘Informal BG’ [
50] showed that in the Black Sea region, the countries of Bulgaria, Romania, Ukraine, Russia and Georgia reached a container turnover of 3.1 million TEU in 2021, where the Ukrainian annual volume was about 1.0 million TEU. For 2022, the total regional container turnover in the Black Sea is expected to decrease by about 35%. However, the analysis predicted a 10% increase in throughput.
The short sea shipping in the Black Sea region has been analysed in [
51]. The study highlighted the continued development of the transport corridors between Asia and Europe. The strategic plan for the year 2030 of the Central Asia Regional Economic Cooperation (CAREC) Program is indicative that the Trans-Caspian International Transport Route, which reaches the Georgian ports of Poti and Batumi, remains of interest to the neighbouring countries, which is an essential link in the multimodal chain.
Improving efficiency and reducing emissions from exhaust gases makes the selected ports of the present study the most representative for the Black Sea region. Additionally, taking into account the recent trends of massive modernisation and construction of new LNG-fuelled ships and despite the speculative rise in LNG fuel prices in recent months, the current trend shows that the UP World LNG Shipping Index—a commodity index for LNG shipping companies—continues to grow (
https://seekingalpha.com/article/4559739-lng-shipping-correction-likely-great-sector, accessed on 20 November 2022), confirming that transforming an existing commercial ageing ship to an LNG-fuelled one is very relevant and it will be of extreme priority.
However, some studies about the container traffic and new containership design for the Black Sea region have been performed in [
5,
10,
51,
52,
53,
54,
55] and LNG as an alternative for retrofitting ageing ships in [
56].
When choosing a ship for retrofitting, the fact of suitable size and age of a ship built near the operating area for this study was initially emphasised, and, in this case, a 9790 DWT multi-purpose ship (
Figure 1) equipped for the carriage of containers was chosen given the facts mentioned above.
The ship was delivered in 2009 and intended for various carriage general, dry bulk, heavy cargo, containers, 40 pcs refrigerating containers on deck, dangerous goods on the main deck and grain. In the study, it is assumed that the navigation area is in the Black Sea.
2.1. Limitations
The installation of a power plant with LNG as fuel makes it necessary to adapt the ship’s design to a specific set of needs, installing equipment and arranging spaces that would not be necessary in the case of conventional propulsion. At the same time, there are limitations related to the construction and installation of different systems on board. There is also a specific requirement for the ship’s safety and people operating retrofitted equipment.
Implementing power plants based on dual engines is technically complex and must comply with demanding requirements regarding their disposal on board, which are imposed by regulation. The versatility of the vessels under study greatly complicates this work since the regular operation of the new equipment cannot interfere in any way with the operations they develop. Limitations are related to a detailed analysis of each system component’s location and the study of hazardous areas and escape routes per the applicable regulations.
The preliminary feasibility study addressed in this section has resulted in the integration of LNG technology could become possible for the chosen vessel since it has a larger space and, therefore, offers greater possibilities in terms of generating alternatives for the integration of the necessary equipment for the consumption of LNG on board.
For the installation of the LNG system, the most important fact is to find a place with enough capacity to contain the LNG tank. The selected storage tank is an independent (type C) tank. This type of tank has many possibilities of installation on board due to its portability, being only necessary for a space which fulfils the safety restrictions imposed by the IGF code [
57].
Finding sufficient space for storing the gas on board the vessel is a significant factor for the success of the conversion. The LNG storage tank location can be freely selected on board the vessel and either vertical or horizontal tanks, on the open deck or below deck, can be selected. When the storage tank is above deck, the requirements set by the classification societies are slightly lower. However, in our case, it is necessary to install the storage tank above the deck because apart from the structural challenges, the difficulties in choosing the location of the gas storage tanks are also related to the bunkering possibilities at the area of selected routes.
The IMO Regulations [
58] were used to locate LNG storage tanks and equipment. According to them, gas storage tanks can be on an open deck or in enclosed spaces. In installing LNG tanks on an open deck, a distance of at least one-fifth of the breadth of the ship from the ship’s side and open decks should be used to ensure sufficient natural ventilation and prevent the accumulation of leaking gas in the event of a leak.
Tanks should also be provided with drain pans which should be fitted under the tank and should be of sufficient capacity to contain the volume that may leak out in the event of pipe connection failure.
The bunkering method is essential for determining the location of the LNG tanks. Unfortunately, there is no fully developed bunkering infrastructure in the ship operation area, so only a tank on the deck is considered.
As seen in
Figure 1, the ship’s superstructure is located as far back as possible so that it does not allow the placement of the gas storage tanks in the stern. On the other hand, the arrangement of such tanks in front of the superstructure is possible, especially since there is an engine room and spaces for auxiliary equipment below the deck, and there will be no requirement to provide space for loading and unloading operations below the main deck. The C-type gas storage tanks are most appropriate for retrofitting the structural arrangement of the multi-purpose ship analysed here.
After the retrofitting, sailing on the route Varna-Poti-Varna is considered and calculated. The maximum fuel consumed for one cycle is 132 m3 of LNG (with included 5% autonomy for bad weather).
The smallest size, i.e., a 30 m
3, is selected and the tank is located on the poop deck, in front of the superstructure, taking up space of four containers (TEU). The tank will be isolated from the top side by a specially built metal platform located 4 m from the deck and designed with a load capacity of 250 tons, sufficient to place four 40ft ISO LNG containers fully loaded and secured by standard foundations and quick-release fittings used on container ships. In addition to the main tank, this permit reaches a capacity of 132 m
3 LNG. The volume of the mobile containers is 33 m
3 [
59].
Such an arrangement meets the requirements, and the length and width of the metal platform are estimated to be 12.2 m and 4.92 m, respectively, while the vertical clearance from the main deck is 4.00 m. The loading and unloading of the adjacent rows of containers are not hindered.
All equipment and systems for regular operation and processing of LNG are installed inside the TCS (tank connection space). It is a closed, gas-tight enclosure, with independent ventilation from the other spaces, made of stainless steel, which acts as a second barrier that prevents a possible LNG leak from affecting the ship’s hull.
All LNG storage tanks [
59] are highly insulated, but gradual heating is inevitable, leading to BOG (boil-over gas), which must be managed. The BOG can be controlled to a certain point for vessels equipped with Type C tanks by allowing the pressure to build. The IGF Code requires that the tank pressure be maintained below the set point of the pressure relief valves without venting gas into the atmosphere. The IGF code proposes that the minimum holding time for pressure vessels (type C vessels) is 15 days.
Another challenge during the retrofitting project is the selection and positioning of the bunker station. LNG bunker operation used to be a critical situation due to the potential risks this operation involved. Apart from the installation of the station, including all necessary pipes, it is essential to consider that a drip tray must be installed. Drip trays shall be fitted where leakage may occur, which can cause damage to the ship structure or where limitation of the area which is affected by a spill is necessary. The drip tray shall also be thermally insulated from the ship’s structure so that the surrounding hull or deck structures are not exposed to unacceptable cooling in case of leakage of liquid fuel. Finally, drip trays must be fitted with a drain valve for rainwater. All these facts are essential to consider when installing on the deck.
A length of 3 m, a width of 1.5 m and a height of 2 m were chosen for the size and dimensions of the bunker station. There are no specific size requirements for these stations and it is sufficient to have room for piping and to provide space for air isolation. The most suitable location is below the deck, where a 1.55 × 1.98 m hydraulic hatch will be constructed to open the station during bunkering. This arrangement of the bunker station will prevent obstructing the deck from passing from the accommodation to the container bays. With this setup, the fuel pipelines will be brought directly to the deck above the bunker station and the construction of additional insulation and casings will not be necessary.
There is a need to install a module related to the use of diesel, such as the module for initial gas ignition, which is also directly related to the gas combustion operation. The module will be located next to the fuel separators in the ER, where the necessary space is 1500 × 800 mm.
2.2. Engine Modifications
The ship is equipped with one four-stroke medium-speed, non-reversible type diesel engine with a gas turbine set for supercharging, intended to operate on heavy fuel oil of viscosity 380 CST at 50 °C. The cylinder jackets and covers are cooled with fresh water, and LO cools the pistons.
Analysing the possibilities of retrofitting the ship’s power plant, it was found that the model of the ship’s main engine—MAK-Caterpillar 6M43C is very suitable for retrofitting into a dual-fuel engine, namely using the new modification of the MAK-Caterpillar 6M46DF, which is essentially the same size as the 6M43C.
The 6M43C has the same footprint as the new M46DF engine. This makes conversion of the existing M43C engines possible and easy to achieve such a conversion holding on to significant components, such as the engine block, crankshaft, air cooler and turbocharger. These are the remaining parts and the rest are to be renewed for M46DF components. The primary drive is increasing the cylinder bore from 430 mm to 460 mm. Therefore, the following parts will be renewed: cylinder liners, cooling water jackets, pistons, cylinder heads, gas fuel line and engine electronics. Additionally, the following equipment is introduced: big end bearing temperature monitoring, leading bearing temperature monitoring and timing sensors to the camshaft gear wheel and flywheel.
Next to the engine itself, many components must be placed near and next to the engine to make it possible to run the engine on gas. These are:
The Gas Valve Unit (GVU) controls the pressure of the gaseous fuel towards the engine and ensures safe operation with double block and bleed valves and ventilation possibilities.
The Ignition Fuel Module (IFM) unit ensures enough filtered fuel oil is delivered to the pilot fuel injection system. The pilot fuel injection system ignites the gaseous fuel.
Vacuum pump unit. The fuel gas line on the engine and between the GVU outlet and the engine is double walled. This unit creates pressure in the double wall barrier to monitoring any leakage. The extracted air is monitored for gas leakage content and blown off outside.
Exhaust ventilation module services in the event of an emergency engine shutdown in gas mode. The exhaust pipe after the turbocharger is to be flushed to prevent the accumulation of an explosive mixture in the exhaust pipe.
Slow turn the device is mounted on the cylinder heads due to the engine’s construction, no indicator or over-pressure valves. To detect water on the piston, a slow turn device is mounted to slowly turn the engine before starting.
Additionally, the ship is to be equipped with gas storage tanks, the master gas valve on deck and transfer pumps suitable for LNG, safety devices according to the IGF Code, such as ex-safety zones, double wall gas piping throughout enclosed spaces and inert gas production, storage and deployment equipment.
The comparison of the dimensions of both engines is presented in
Table 2, which shows that they are practically the same.
The dual-fuel engine has additional equipment, such as a ventilation module, pre-ignition module, GVU gas supply module, glycol-GU module, BS bunker station, engine slow rotation module, etc. Summing up the weight of the additional equipment, the dual-combustion engine will be heavier by about 4 tonnes, which will not affect the engine’s characteristics.
2.3. Ship Performance
The operating parameters of both engines are shown in
Table 3. The output power of the engines is the same. Additionally, of utmost importance is that the 500 rpm operating speed has not changed, so there will be no need to change propeller shafts, gearboxes and propellers to take power off.
The specific fuel consumptions are indicated in
Table 4, in which the values are given separately depending on the mode of operation of diesel or gas and for the different working loads of the engine, being converted into tons per hour for easy comparison.
It is important to note that the dual-fuel engine has a higher diesel consumption than the currently installed engine. This is a negative point for the dual fuel, which, when running on diesel, will consume more than the current engine, giving the ship less autonomy. The big difference is mainly because the new engine has a pilot pre-ignition system. The speed of a ship depends on the power generated and one can see from the running characteristics of the considered ship in
Table 5.
To obtain the gas consumption in tonnes or cubic meters per hour, it is necessary to know the Lover Calorific Value (LCV) and the fuel gas density. Depending on the composition of the gas, these properties may have different values. However, the variation range is small that the average values of LCV = 49.5 (KJ/g) and density of 0.45 t/m
3 can be used. The gas consumption in tonnes or cubic meters per hour is presented in
Table 6.
The natural gas consumption under standard ISO conditions corresponds to the natural gas in the liquid state at 100%, 85%, 70% and 50% MCR, respectively. To convert natural gas into an equivalent gaseous state, its consumption is multiplied by the ratio between the liquid and gaseous state, which is 1/600, leading to a 75% load of 810 m3/h consumption in a gaseous state and a 50% load of 468 m3/h consumption in a gaseous state.
5. Conclusions
The international maritime community, including the leading international institutions, are actively looking to reduce greenhouse gas and carbon dioxide emissions from shipping. Efforts are directed in several directions, such as the design of new ships optimised in size and energy efficiency, innovations in marine engines, utilisation of residual heat, new hull coatings, reducing water resistance and alternative fuels. Optimistic plans aim for 2050 when greenhouse gas emissions are at least 50% of 2008 levels and emissions will be at 70% of 2008.
The last MEPC (79) started discussion on a revision of the Initial IMO Strategy that is expected to be adopted at MEPC 80 (July 2023). The more important decision on that session is the adoption of amendments to MARPOL Annex VI, acknowledging the whole of the Mediterranean Sea as a designated SOx-ECA (SECA). The amendments will enter into force on 1 May 2024 with the mandatory requirement to use fuel oil with a sulphur content of 0.10% from 1 May 2025.
Recent studies show that the IMO goals can be achieved with alternative fuels that are not petroleum based. However, for the time being, the best alternative fuel in this transition is liquefied natural gas. Despite the high prices of the last year and their variability, the number of refitted and newbuilt ships is constantly growing. Analysts predict that the high prices of liquefied natural gas will not prevent this alternative fuel’s introduction into operation.
Along with this, carbon trading in shipping should also be considered. The Council and the European Parliament reached a provisional political agreement on important legislative proposals of the ‘Fit for 55’ package to include maritime shipping emissions within the scope of the EU ETS and gradually introduce obligations for shipping companies to surrender allowances: 40% for verified emissions from 2024, 70% for 2025 and 100% for 2026.
It is expected that this will also lead to an increase in freight rates and the issue of refitting the ageing ships to improve their competitiveness in the new conditions comes to the forefront.
To answer the question facing every shipowner whether to invest in retrofitting a ship and switching to dual fuel use, a study was made on the economic feasibility of retrofitting a multi-purpose ship operating on short sea routes. After retrofitting with LNG, the economic effect of operating the ship in the Black Sea on the Varna-Poti-Varna line has been analysed, evaluating the four NPV scenarios representing Denying, Disinterested, Good and Acceptable financial cash outflow. It seems that in the present economic instability and price of LNG fuel and taxes, the ship owner needs to rely on the long-term contract of buying LNG fuel to implement measures to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and keep good benefits in shipping. The present study introduces a framework that can easily be employed in analysing the economic feasibility of retrofitting ageing ships.
The conducted feasibility analysis and the technical measures related to the retrofitting will be fundamental for the decision-making in implementing the retrofitting and using the LNG fuel and could be used as a risk-based asset management tool regarding the zero-pollution action for the new emission control areas that are planned to be developed in the Black Sea.
However, the methodology used for the feasibility analysis demonstrates limitations in terms of the use of the global and regional information related to the shipping and retrofitting economic and financial factors, which may change suddenly depending on the economic and political conditions and consequently impact the projected trend.