Climate change is posing serious financial challenges to the shipping industry, which is naturally volatile and in constant search of stable sources of investment. 

The sector has always been aware of this onus but it wasn’t until recently that researchers put a price tag on it, estimating the scale of investment needed for decarbonisation would be between $1trn and $1.4trn. 

To be raised between 2030 and 2050, the figure comes from a new report co-authored by the University Maritime Advisory Services (UMAS) and the Energy Transitions Commission on behalf of the Global Maritime Forum for the Getting to Zero Coalition. It splits the $1trn between land-based infrastructure – which will require the majority of the investment – and on-board technologies. 

Yet a new proposal from the International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) could help achieve this purpose. The organisation recently proposed creating a new $5bn research and development (R&D) programme to further investigate effective ways to achieve carbon neutrality. 

After all, as expensive as these initiatives may turn out to be, the industry doesn’t have much of a choice. Figures from the Economist Group’s World Ocean initiative show the sector accounts for some 3% of global CO2 emissions. A growth in demand – which is currently on hold due to the cCoronavirus outbreak, but could bounce back once tackled – could lead the figure to almost double, with carbon emissions increasing from the current 0.9 gigatonnes to 1.7 by 2050. 

But the reassuring news (if any) is that the burden will be shared not just across the industry, but among several other players, from governments to organisations like the IMO, as well as the supply chain and those in charge with building sustainable fuel facilities. 

How well do you really know your competitors?

Access the most comprehensive Company Profiles on the market, powered by GlobalData. Save hours of research. Gain competitive edge.

Company Profile – free sample

Thank you!

Your download email will arrive shortly

Not ready to buy yet? Download a free sample

We are confident about the unique quality of our Company Profiles. However, we want you to make the most beneficial decision for your business, so we offer a free sample that you can download by submitting the below form

By GlobalData
Visit our Privacy Policy for more information about our services, how we may use, process and share your personal data, including information of your rights in respect of your personal data and how you can unsubscribe from future marketing communications. Our services are intended for corporate subscribers and you warrant that the email address submitted is your corporate email address.

With plenty more to do and time running out, will these sums be enough, and to what extent will they weigh on the sector’s shoulders? 

Breaking down the $1trn investment

Formulated around the potential adoption of ammonia across the global fleet, UMAS’s study would have 87% of investment spent in land-based infrastructure and the remaining 13% for on-board technologies. The capital would be spread across 20 years – between 2030 and 2050 – and would be the result of a joint effort between different stakeholders. 

“More than $1trn of investment seems high because we have not acted so far,” says principal consultant at UMAS and contributor to the paper Dr Carlo Raucci. “If we wait any longer, the number will sound even higher.”

“More than $1trn of investment seems high because we have not acted so far.”

Assuming ammonia as the primary option for future fleets, Raucci says that bunkering facilities will attract most of the capital over the two decades. “The bulk of the investment will be for ammonia plants. By 2050, the global ammonia demand is estimated to be more than 900 million tonnes per year.” A large ammonia plant has a capacity of around 7,000 tonnes per day, which means between ten and 20 of these plants will have to become operational every year to meet demands. 

Building these facilities will require substantial investment, something that Raucci says is no novelty in the energy sector: “The 87% is based on the fact that this infrastructure for shipping does not exist and therefore we considered the capital needed as additional. 

“However, there is money currently flowing into land-based infrastructure; [evidence shows] energy investments in 2018 were $1.85 trillion and global fossil fuel consumption subsidies were over $400bn in the same year.”

The study concludes that shipping leaders will have to invest between $130bn and $182bn in developing onboard technologies that support sustainable propulsion. 

Thanks to the ICS’s proposed R&D board, this process could soon be sped up and receive much-needed funding. “The fundamental purpose would be to accelerate the research and development of zero-carbon technologies that will allow the industry to achieve the 2050 target for CO2 reduction that’s been set by the IMO,” explains ICS deputy general Simon Bennett. 

Starting the project would require companies to contribute $2 a tonne of fuel (based on consumption), for a total $5bn that will help get the board running. “When you multiply that $2 contribution by the fuel estimated consumption of the world fleet, then it produces a figure over ten years of roughly $5bn,” he says, adding the figure could grow even further if everything goes as planned. 

What awaits shipping companies?

However small compared to the total amount of investment needed, both initiatives point to the fact that heavier financial investment will be expected from shipping companies in the years to come. 

According to UMAS’s study, 12% of it will have to be spent on engines and storage and 1% of it on energy efficiency technology. In these regards, cruise ships could end up paying a partially higher price due to safety and security reasons, as they’ll have to “use easier-to-handle low/zero-carbon fuels which in turn may mean extra costs”. Overall, the more space there is on a ship, the pricier decarbonisation will be for its owner. 

“There is a common understanding from several stakeholders that the decarbonisation of the shipping industry represents a significant challenge,” says Raucci. “I think the industry knew that this was going to be a big number; however, the magnitude surprised many.”

As surprised as they might be, Simon Bennett stresses that all stakeholders will eventually have to weigh in, although this is not to say they are entirely willing to do it. This is why the $2 contribution required for the fund will be mandatory. 

“The more space there is on a ship, the pricier decarbonisation will be for its owner.”

“The only way that such a mechanism can work is if it is mandatory,” he says. “Otherwise you have no means of ensuring that every shipping company would pay a fare, because [for what] we are talking about every ship in the world fleet above the tonnage threshold would have to contribute to this fund.”

As per the proposal, these contributions will become mandatory via amendments to the current International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships (MARPOL), which is responsible for tackling all types of marine pollution. These amendments, Bennett continues, would simply require shipping companies to show evidence that they had contributed. “All the operation of the fund would be done by the fund itself,” he adds.

Sharing the costs will be paramount

A recurring argument that anyone involved in tackling climate change will make is that carbon neutrality cannot be achieved individually. Cross-sector, beyond-borders, 360-degree collaboration is paramount to make change happen, especially for an industry that’s been long hit by financial misfortunes. 

Raucci stresses that transformation efforts will have to incorporate anything from the supply chain to non-governmental and political bodies: “Collaboration is needed to make sure the investments are not lost in options that are not aligned with the end game goal, the decarbonisation.”

“We have to focus on what we have control over, which is making sustainable fuels and propulsion systems operational onboard large merchant ships.”

In this spirit, financial efforts “will depend on the specific country’s opportunity to become a new low-carbon fuel exporter,” he continues. “Moreover, once the key private stakeholders have collected and understood the key evidence, I would expect to see a greater willingness from the investors to share risks and move forwards.”

Simon Bennett is hoping to send a similar message through his R&D fund. Currently pending approval from the IMO’s Maritime Environmental Protection Committee, the project is bidding to attract that same investment everyone else is now desperately looking for. 

“We [industry players] have to focus on what we have control over, which is making sustainable fuels and propulsion systems operational onboard large merchant ships. Making it possible for there to be a demand [for] these new fuels will then hopefully encourage the investment that’s needed to make the supply possible,” he concludes.