Methanol continues to make new inroads into the
marine fuel market. Yesterday, it was the bulk carrier segment where methanol fueling was in the news. Today, it’s cruising. Costa Group, part of
Carnival Corporation and a leading European cruise operator with its two brands
Costa Cruises and AIDA Cruises, has signed an MOU with one of the world’s
leading methanol producers, Proman.
The MOU aims to push forward the implementation of
methanol as a marine fuel by the cruise industry, by enhancing the supply of sustainable methanol,
paving the way for the retrofitting of existing vessels to operate on clean
fuel, as well as investment in further methanol-fuelednewbuilds.
The MOU reaffirms
methanol’s potential to play a key role in the ongoing reduction of GHG
emissions of the cruise sector and other shipping segments.
Costa and Proman say
that it is a cleaner-burning fuel which
virtually eliminates airborne pollutants such as particulate matter and
sulfur oxides and is widely available and increasingly produced via
lower-carbon, biogenic or hydrogen-based pathways. When used in fuel cells,
methanol has the potential to allow for lifecycle zero emissions in the near
future.
Methanol is emerging
as a leading alternative fuel to meet GHG reduction goals due to its
easy-to-handle properties, making it attractive for both new builds and for
refitting existing ships..
Costa Group has a history of steadily pioneering
advanced technologies on board its new and existing ships. The company was the first to introduce liquefied
natural gas (LNG) propulsion for emission reduction with four ships already in
service in the Costa Group fleet. The majority of Costa Group ships are
equipped with shore power capabilities to be zero emissions in ports where the
technology is available, and the company has also performed its first tests on
biofuels.
“We are reducing the
carbon footprint of our fleet while at port and at sea, investing in advanced
environmental technologies and partnering with companies such as Proman who
share a passion for sustainable energy transition,” said – said Dr. Christoph Schladoer,
VP decarbonization at Costa Group. “By
enabling cruise ships to use methanol as a propulsion fuel, Costa follows the
ambition to take the next big step towards GHG neutral operations of our fleet
by 2050.