That’s how
much more seaborne vessels may be forced to spend each year on higher-quality
fuel to comply with new emission rules that start in 2020, consultant Wood
Mackenzie Ltd. estimates. For an industry that hauls everything from oil to
steel to coal, higher operating costs will compound the financial strain on
cash-strapped ship owners, whose vessels earn an average of 70 percent less
than they did just before the 2008-09 recession.
The
consequences may reach beyond the 90,000-ship merchant fleet, which handles
about 90 percent of global trade. Possible confusion over which carriers
comply with the new rules could lead to some vessels being barred from making
deliveries, which would disrupt shipments, according to BIMCO, a group
representing ship owners and operators in about 130 countries. Oil
refiners still don’t have enough capacity to supply all the fuel that would be
needed, and few vessels have embarked on costly retrofits.
“There will
be an absolute chaos,” said Lars Robert Pedersen, the deputy secretary general
of Denmark-based BIMCO. “We are talking about 2.5 million to 4 million barrels
a day of fuel oil to basically shift into a different product.”
Merchant ships around the world are required to cut the amount
of sulfur emitted under rules approved in October by the International Maritime Organization, a UN agency
that sets industry standards for safety, security and the environment. As well
as contributing to acid rain, sulfur, combined with oxygen, can form fine
sulfate particles that can be inhaled by humans and may cause asthma and
bronchitis, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
There are two
main ways to comply: vessel engines are fitted with scrubbers that would
eliminate the pollutant, or oil refiners will have to make lower-emission fuels.
The limit on sulfur content will drop to 0.5 percent from 3.5 percent.
Not Enough
So far,
neither the refining industry nor shipping is doing anywhere near enough for
owners to achieve compliance in 2020, according Iain Mowat, a senior analyst at
Wood Mackenzie.
“Ship owners
are reluctant to install scrubbers to continue using the same oil because of
uncertainties and lack of funding,” Mowat said. “And most refineries won’t
invest to convert heavy fuel because that will cost more than $1 billion and take
about five years to complete.”
Just 2.2
percent of the fleet will have scrubbers installed by 2020 that would allow
them to continue using current fuels, estimates the International Energy Agency
in Paris, an adviser to 29 nations.
“The compliant technical options are still very immature, and it
is hard for us to see them as a real compliance option for our fleet,” said
Aslak Ross, head of marine standards at Maersk Line, the world’s biggest container shipping
company. For Maersk alone, the additional fuel cost will amount to billions of
dollars annually, he said.
$4 Million Per Engine
Most ships
will switch to using a mix of lower-sulfur fuel oil or more-expensive middle
distillates, according to Jan Christensen, head of global bunker operations
at Bomin Bunker Holding, a Hamburg, Germany-based fuels supplier.
The scrubbing
technology could cost as much as $4 million per engine, depending on its size,
said Nick Confuorto, president and chief operating officer at scrubber supplier
CR Ocean Engineering. Retrofitting engines might be worth doing, possibly
paying off in two years, because the price of compliant fuel probably will be
three times higher than what ships currently burn, he said.
While the
world’s largest owners are already reserving spaces for refits, smaller
operators are taking a more wait-and-see approach, said Neil Carmichael, chief
executive officer at Pacific Green Technologies.
Wood
Mackenzie estimates about 70 percent compliance globally by 2020 and full
compliance by 2025 after a transition period.
Tough Markets
Merchant
ships earned an average of about $9,800 a day this year, according to data from
Clarkson Research Services Ltd., part of the world’s biggest shipbroker. Ten
years ago, they were earning about $34,000. In the industry’s three main
markets -- container shipping, dry-bulk cargo transportation, and oil tankers
-- there’s been evidence of overcapacity and depressed rates over the past
several years.
Those
tough markets are making it harder for owners to secure investment and finance
they need to comply, which means the IMO and its member states will probably
permit some kind of transition period when the 2020 rules begin, Simon Bennett,
policy director and external relations at the International Chamber of
Shipping, said in a phone interview.
“If
there were no flexibility on Jan. 1 and owners couldn’t get fuel, then that
would have an impact on world trade,” Bennett said. Either way, “this will have
a profound impact on the economics of shipping.”
Source: Bloomberg

No comments:
Post a Comment