DFT Freight Predictions Signal End of Oil Era

Tuesday, August 26, 2025

The UK’s Department for Transport has today published new long-term forecasts showing a major shift in the way goods move through British ports, with oil and fossil fuel traffic expected to collapse while ferries, Ro-Ro and container shipping surge.

The UK Port Freight Traffic Forecasts (2024–2050) predict that overall volumes will rise modestly, from 420.6 million tons in 2023 to 453.5 million tons in 2050 (+7.8%). But the shape of that traffic will be transformed:

  • Unitized freight (ferries, Ro-Ro and containers) is set to rise by 56.7%, becoming the largest segment of UK port traffic and accounting for over half (52.5%) of the total by 2050, up from just 34% today.
  • Dry bulk cargo will increase by 61.7%, reflecting demand for ores and industrial materials.
  • Liquid bulk (oil and oil products) will collapse by 63.3%, falling from 169.3 million tons to just 62.1 million tons as the energy transition takes hold.

The UK has seen a significant reduction in crude oil refining, with just 6 operational refineries today from 18 in the 1970s. The reliance on oil is dwindling and will only accelerate as the motor and energy sectors increasingly move towards sustainable options and demand for fossil-based products falls.

For ports and shipping operators, the message is clear: the growth is coming from sectors that can and must electrify.

NatPower Marine is poised to deliver change at ports around the world, investing heavily in the infrastructure to match this transformation. In partnership with Peel Ports Group, it is committing USD$134 million (£100 million) to electrify eight major UK and Irish ports, creating the first green shipping corridors across the Irish Sea.

By 2030, NatPower will deliver USD$336 million (£250 million) shorepower infrastructure, a global network of 120 clean ports, designed around the busiest commercial routes. Working directly with cruise, ferry and shipping lines, the company is building a route-based charging network that ensures vessels can plug into clean electricity at berth (cold ironing) and en route (propulsion charging).

This model not only reduces emissions but also directly tackles the Scope 3 emissions from vessel operations that make up the bulk of a port’s carbon footprint. By switching from bunker fuels to electricity, ships can cut CO₂, NOx, and SOx emissions in port by up to 95%, improving air quality in surrounding communities by cutting port-hosting city pollutants by 35% while helping operators meet tightening IMO and UK net zero targets.

NatPower Marine’s approach treats electricity as a new kind of fuel: time-critical, high-capacity demand that must be managed intelligently. By integrating large-scale battery energy storage with charging systems, ports can absorb surges when ships connect to the grid, protecting resilience while keeping costs predictable for operators.

In the UK only, NatPower is scaling to support maritime electrification with 12.5 GW of grid connection applications and of grid connection applications and 100 GWh of battery storage in development. Its clean energy ecosystem is designed to power vessels directly, ensuring shipping companies have access to reliable, emissions-free energy wherever they trade.

Categories: Industry News Activity Shipping Cargo Goods

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