New study finds efficiency of new ships falling
Recent improvements in the design efficiency of new ships went into reverse last year, a new independent study commissioned by Transport & Environment (T&E) and Seas At Risk, has found.
Key facts
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The average design efficiency of new bulk carriers, oil tankers and gas carriers was worse in 2016 than in 2015
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The share of new ships complying with future efficiency standards also decreased in 2016
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The design efficiency of containerships and general cargo ships appears to be stagnating after a period of improvement.
The CE Delft study data also confirms earlier findings that a considerable proportion of new ships are over-complying with the IMO’s design efficiency standard – known as the EEDI – indicating that the standard’s requirements need strengthening, if it is to stimulate the uptake of new technologies and drive efficiency improvements.
The groups that commissioned the study, said that tightening of the EEDI requirements in 2017 and 2018 should be a priority for the IMO and that proposals from industry and some governments to delay should be resisted.
Faig Abbasov, shipping officer at T&E, said: “Despite a clear trend of increasing over-compliance with ship design efficiency standards over recent years, ships built in 2016 mark a clear break from this tendency. Unless EEDI requirements are tightened, there is a risk that this backsliding could continue back to efficiency levels merely required by regulation. The significant gap between achieved efficiency levels and what is required by the regulation only underlines the urgency to ensure the requirements match the levels of efficiency that industry has clearly shown it is capable of achieving.”
The analysis shows that 14% of bulk carriers, 52% of containerships, 23% of tankers, 21% of gas carriers and 55% of general cargo ships that entered the fleet in 2016 already met the 2025 design efficiency standard. T&E and Seas At Risk say the ease with which ships over-comply exposes the weakness of the efficiency standard and the urgent need for it to be strengthened.
John Maggs, senior policy advisor at Seas At Risk, said: “Tighter ship design efficiency standards are an obvious low hanging fruit as the IMO embarks on the development of a comprehensive strategy to tackle climate change. The study shows both the potential of design standards to mitigate future ship greenhouse gas emissions and the very real danger that if the IMO doesn’t act quickly then hard-won design efficiency gains will be lost.”
A much-needed review of the standard is underway but some IMO states are pushing to have the review and decision on tightening delayed until spring 2019. The IMO will discuss these issues at its environment committee meeting in London (MEPC 71) this week.
Explore more in the official report: