Mozambique Oil & Gas: Shipping Firm CMA CGM Chooses LNG To Power New Vessels

CMA - CGM - GTT-to-design-fuel-tanks-for-cma-chms-lng-containerships
Image courtesy of CMA CGM

Container shipping giant CMA CGM said on Tuesday that it would use liquified natural gas (LNG) to power nine extra-large vessels it has ordered, in a first for an industry grappling with how to comply with tougher rules on emissions.

LNG has been promoted as an alternative to bunker fuel oil for shipping lines facing a 2020 deadline to meet new international standards on sulphur emissions.

CMA CGM had announced in September an order for nine vessels that would be among the largest container ships ever built, but it said it was still studying what fuel to adopt.

“CMA CGM is becoming the first shipping company in the world to equip giant container ships with this type of motorization,” the French-based company said in a statement.

“By choosing LNG, the CMA CGM Group goes beyond current and future regulations that limit the sulphur cap to 0.5 percent (content in fuel) in 2020.”

The new rules will reduce the maximum sulphur content in fuels from 3.5 percent currently.

Compared to heavy fuel oil, LNG would allow ships to reduce sulphur emissions by 99 percent, carbon dioxide emissions by 25 percent and the overall environmental footprint by 20 percent, CMA CGM said.

The group had said previously it would have to consider the need to develop an LNG supply chain in its choice of fuel for the future giant ships.

CMA CGM has in the past year signed agreements with French energy firms Engie and Total to develop LNG supplies for shipping.

Its memorandum of understanding with Total called on the oil and gas producer to become a multi-fuel supplier to CMA CGM, providing LNG as well as fuel oil with 0.5 percent sulphur content.

The shipping group, the world’s third-largest container line, also said in Tuesday’s statement that it was discussing with partners including ports how to create the necessary infrastructure for fueling LNG-powered vessels. (Reuters: Reporting by Gus Trompiz; Editing by Sudip Kar-Gupta, Greg Mahlich)

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