Decarbonization Group Seeks Proposals for Carbon Capture Shipping Project

December 6, 2022

A Singapore-based decarbonization group said on Tuesday it was seeking proposals to study ways to offload captured carbon dioxide from ships during port calls.

The call for proposals is part of the world's first project aimed at building and testing a full-scale carbon-dioxide capture system aboard an oil tanker.

The Global Centre for Maritime Decarbonisation (GCMD), a non-profit organisation based in Singapore that supports decarbonisation of the maritime industry, announced the project in October.

The GCMD said on Tuesday it expected by the second quarter of 2023 to choose a proposal for a study into means of offloading carbon dioxide. The study should be completed in nine months, it said.

The eventual findings are intended to help shape regulatory and operational guidelines that could steer future adoption of shipboard carbon capture technologies.

The initiative comes as more shipping and energy companies conduct studies on carbon capture amid increasing pressure to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050.

The pipeline for commodities-sector projects to capture and store carbon emissions has grown around 44% in the past year to 244 million tonnes a year, according to a study published in October.


(Reuters - Reporting by Jeslyn Lerh; Editing by Bradley Perrett)

Logistics News

CMA CGM’s Shipping Engine Holds Course in a Volatile Q3

CMA CGM’s Shipping Engine Holds Course in a Volatile Q3

Mitsubishi Shipbuilding Delivers Vessel KEYAKI

Mitsubishi Shipbuilding Delivers Vessel KEYAKI

Online Training Helps Maritime Professionals Recognize Signs of Human Trafficking

Online Training Helps Maritime Professionals Recognize Signs of Human Trafficking

Wilson Sons Earns 2025 Diamond Sustainability Seal from Brazilian Ministry of Ports and Airports

Wilson Sons Earns 2025 Diamond Sustainability Seal from Brazilian Ministry of Ports and Airports

Subscribe for Maritime Logistics Professional E‑News

US Postal Service reports a $9 billion annual loss and seeks reforms
Enbridge approves a $1.4 billion project that will boost Canadian oil flow to U.S. refining facilities
Azerbaijani oil exports through BTC pipeline fell 5.9% year-on-year amid contamination, according to data.