Ship owners worry about clean fuel bill as ports ban
'scrubbers'
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[March 19, 2019]
By Jonathan Saul and Nina Chestney
LONDON (Reuters) - More ports around the
world are banning ships from using a fuel cleaning system that pumps
waste water into the sea, one of the cheapest options for meeting new
environmental shipping rules.
The growing number of destinations imposing stricter regulations than
those set by the International Maritime Organization (IMO) are expected
to be a costly headache for cruise and shipping firms as they face tough
market conditions and slowing world trade. They might have to pay for
new equipment and extra types of fuel and adjust their routes.
Singapore, China and Fujairah in the United Arab Emirates have already
banned the use of the cleaning systems, called open loop scrubbers, from
the start of next year when the new IMO rules come into force.
Reuters has learned that individual ports in Finland, Lithuania, Ireland
and Russia, have all banned or restricted such equipment, according to
interviews with officials and reviews of documents by Reuters. One
British port has occasionally imposed restrictions.
Norway is also working on open loop scrubber bans around its world
heritage fjords, an official with the climate and environment ministry
told Reuters. A ban on all types of scrubbers is also proposed, the
official added.
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The IMO rules will prohibit ships from using fuels with sulfur content
above 0.5 percent, unless they are equipped with exhaust gas cleaning
systems. The open loop scrubbers wash out the sulfur and some industry
experts believe they are the cheapest way to meet the new global rules.
Companies that invested in open loop scrubbers will be unable to use
them while sailing through those port waters. They also fear the IMO
rules could change again and ban open loop scrubbers altogether.
The world's top cruise operator Carnival Corporation has invested over
$500 million to deploy the devices.
Carnival's Mike Kaczmarek, senior vice president for marine technology
and refit with oversight of the group's scrubbers program, said the port
moves were "very troubling".
"The more ports that participate in this, the greater the (economic)
impact," he said.
"A lot of people out there...in good faith have made significant
investments."
Ships with open loop scrubbers docking or sailing through those ports
would need to store waste in tanks until it could be discharged
elsewhere or avoid the ports.
The other option is to use a scrubber with a "closed loop", which stores
the waste until it can be treated on land. There are also hybrid
scrubbers with a loop that can be open or closed.
Ship owners could also choose another energy source such as low sulfur
fuel or liquefied natural gas (LNG). Some experts say there will be
enough low sulfur fuel available to avoid fitting scrubbers.
Data from Norwegian risk management and certification company DNV GL
shows there will be a total of 2,693 ships running with scrubbers by the
end of 2019 - based on current orders – and over 80 percent of them will
be open loop devices, compared with 15 percent using hybrid scrubbers
and 2 percent opting for closed loop scrubbers.
REGULATORY UNCERTAINTY
Initial research to date into the environmental impact of open loop
scrubbers has produced a range of results. The ports and authorities
that have banned them have acted in anticipation of studies that
conclusively show the discharge is harmful, environmental groups say.
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Container cranes are pictured at the Port of Singapore, June 10,
2018. REUTERS/Feline Lim
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International regulation often lags local action and the IMO rules were agreed
in 2016 after years of tense discussions.
An official with Sweden's Gothenburg port said it recommended shipowners in
their waters not to use open loop scrubbers as a precautionary principle to
"avoid discharges of scrubber wash water in coastal waters and port areas".
Businesses are waiting to see if the IMO rules will change.
"What is terrible for business is uncertainty in regulation and changes which
are not broadcast well in advance," said Hamish Norton, president of dry bulk
shipping group Star Bulk Carriers, among the biggest investors in scrubbers.
Jurisdictions that have not imposed restrictions are also watching closely.
The IMO encouraged member states in February to research the impact of scrubbers
on the environment. An IMO spokeswoman said it was up to countries to make any
proposal to tighten scrubber regulation, which would need consensus approval by
its 174 member states.
The 28 European Union countries submitted a paper to the IMO which said the use
of open loop scrubbers was "expected to lead to a degradation of the marine
environment due to the toxicity of water discharges". It said it wanted to see
"harmonization of rules and guidance".
A separate paper submitted to the IMO, commissioned by Panama - the world's top
ship registration state - and conducted by the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology, said more scientific investigation was needed.
THE FRONT PAGE TEST
A number of jurisdictions without bans, including Gibraltar, South Korea and
Australia said they were investigating.
"We will study to find out how harmful it is to oceans and then consider what
actions we can take," said an official with South Korea’s Ministry of Oceans and
Fisheries.
"If the IMO sets out a guideline on this, we will comply."
Others are pushing back. Japan's Ministry of Land, Infrastructure, Transport and
Tourism, said it concluded in research last year that there was little impact on
the marine environment from scrubber water discharges.
Carnival said a study it commissioned concluded that scrubbers were safe and
discharges were over 90 percent lower than maximum allowable levels in various
waters.
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Nevertheless, many in the industry expect the rules to change.
Ivar Hansson Myklebust, chief executive with Hoegh Autoliners, said at a recent
Marine Money conference the vehicle transporter was not ordering any scrubbers.
"The (open loop) scrubbers have a hard time passing the front page test taking
pollutants from the air and dumping it into the sea," he said.
(Additional reporting by Gary McWilliams in Houston, Gederts Gelzis in Riga,
Andrius Sytas in Vilnius, Rod Nickel in Winnipeg, Roslan Khasawneh in Singapore,
Esha Vaish in Stockholm, Jane Chung in Seoul, Yuka Obayashi in Tokyo, Gus
Trompiz in Paris, Gleb Stolyarov in Moscow and Anne Kauranen in Helsinki;
editing by Anna Willard)
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