Posted - Wednesday, 20 February 2013 | 00:00 - Nikos Roussanoglou, Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide
In a multi-tier market that differentiates between vessels based on 
their efficiency, the newly bred "Eco-Ships" will result in 
significantly improved employment opportunities and earnings for these 
energy optimised vessels, says Mr. Athanasios Reisopoulos, Vice 
President, Area Office Southern Europe of Germanischer Lloyd Hellas 
M.E.P.E. In an interview with Hellenic Shipping News Worldwide, Mr. 
Reisopoulos 
  discussed the latest measures in effect regarding reducing emissions 
and better streamlining a ship owner's operations, the prospects of LNG 
as a leading shipping fuel, as well as GL's market-leading products and 
services, aimed at aiding ship owners achieve better fuel-efficiency. 
Among the key issues that the shipping industry is facing today 
has to do with the reduction of shipping emissions, which not only 
benefits the environment, but also ship owners, since they can reduce 
their operating costs, through the respective fall in fuel consumption. 
What types of package services does GL offer ship owners towards this 
direction?
Reducing the emissions from the shipping industry is the focus of a 
great deal of imminent regulation and software systems that help to give
 owners and charterers a transparent and comprehensive assessment of the
 environmental performance of their vessels are in ever greater use. Not
 only in terms of emissions to air, where Sulphur limits will soon come 
into place, but in terms of ballast water, other liquid waste and solid 
rubbish.
There are a number of operational systems that aid efficiency and 
reducing environmental impacts already in use today including: trim 
optimisation, engine system performance optimisation, weather routing, 
voyage execution and performance monitoring. GL’s SeaScout system is an 
integrated onboard system that provides ships’ officers with 
decision-making support.
GL also recently launched the new GL EmissionManager system to track and
 record the total picture of a vessel’s or an entire fleet’s emissions. 
The system can record and analyse all emissions, including the 
environmental, operational and state data. This can then be used to 
build up a picture of the vessel, and used for comparison purposes 
within a fleet, as well as to support certification and approval 
applications. 
Input into the system can be triggered by events and the process ensures
 data quality through plausibility and completeness checks. Collected by
 an onboard recorder this data is transferred to GL’s “Green Server” 
where it can be accessed securely via the web. GL’s FleetManager 
analysis software can then generate reports for entire or individual 
fleets, which can be accessed by the ship owner or operator.
FutureShip, GL’s consulting subsidiary offers a number of services and 
products, including the award winning ECO-Assistant trim optimiser. Trim
 is one of the central drivers of energy efficiency in ship operation 
and the system delivers an optimum trim angle for a specific ship with 
the input of only a few simple operational parameters, such as current 
speed, displacement and water depth. It can be applied to all kinds of 
vessels, including container vessels and bulk carriers and installed on 
any computer, requiring no modifications to the ship and no interfaces 
with the vessel’s systems.
During 2013 a number of new regulations are expected to come into force,
  which are going to impact the day-to-day operation of shipping 
companies. Could you highlight the most important ones and how do you 
think they are going to impact the maritime business?
An increased focus on the environmental performance of the maritime 
industry as a whole has led to the introduction of the first global 
industry wide measures to combat CO2 emissions – the EEDI and the SEEMP.
 These measures, took effect at the beginning of 2013, will have a 
sweeping effect on most of the world’s commercial sea going vessels and 
owners must be prepared for their introduction.
Envisioned as a management tool to assist a company in improving energy 
efficiency of ships in operation, a SEEMP must be specific for each ship
 in a fleet and should be used together with established environmental 
management systems. A SEEMP allows companies to reduce fuel consumption 
through simple operational measures and making investments that can 
improve performance and pay off in reduced costs.
The SEEMP has the potential to enhance the deployment of data sharing 
and the modern software tools that go along with the sophisticated 
analysis of a vessel’s and a fleet’s performance. It also seems certain 
to increase the commercial pressure on inefficient operators as 
companies which take advantage of fuel saving measures are driven to 
maximise their efficiencies. Vessels with a SEEMP in place has already 
shown to make marked improvements in fuel consumption and as the 
processes and systems become more familiar to the shipping industry this
 seems certain to grow.
On the other hand the EEDI will continue to develop and improve and its 
full application will really only be seen in the future as ever more 
efficient vessels. Increasingly, however, we are seeing that clients are
 coming to GL for early certification of their vessels, and in some 
cases their entire fleets, as they see the EEDI as a way to demonstrate 
the investments they have made in efficiency gains in their vessels.
The Maritime Labour Convention, 2006 (MLC 2006) will also have a 
significant impact on shipowners, managers, crewing agencies and most 
importantly the seafarers on-board. With its entry into force this year,
 the MLC 2006 will consolidate some 37 ILO conventions and require the 
certification of over 55,000 seagoing vessels. Preparing for this sea 
change will require a massive adjustment and impact on every level of an
 organisation. Around 50,000 ships will have to be inspected and 
certified before the MLC 2006 enters into force.
The MLC 2006 Convention requires the documentation of many crewing 
processes including: checking that all required positions on board 
filled, that the seafarers are medically fit, well trained and qualified
 for the duties they are assigned to, and that records are maintained of
 the seafarers’ daily hours of work and rest.
LNG is among the most promising new fuels soon to be widely 
available to ship owners who wish to use this as their vessels' leading 
energy source. GL has long been campaigning for the benefits from the 
use of LNG as a shipping fuel. Which are the benefits of this fuel, both
 in terms of costs entailed, as well as environmentally?
LNG fuelled ships will have overall lower Co2 emissions. However the 
real benefit from LNG comes in terms of local emissions – SOx, NOx and 
particulates and this is where it has the greatest advantages over HFO. 
An LNG fuelled vessel will also have a better EEDI. In the absence of 
methane slip, LNG has a lower carbon content than standard HFO and 
therefore assuming all other design characteristics are equal a LNG 
fuelled ship will have a better EEDI.
As ever the prime consideration in LNG adoption will be fuel price, as 
we can see from the MAN/GL containership study. The actual fuel cost we 
will see delivered depends upon how the bunkering and infrastructure 
develops, as well as the overall gas market as gas becomes increasingly 
important for power generation around the world.  
Do you believe that the infrastructure necessary to implement 
LNG bunkering is available at the moment? When do you expect this market
 to fully develop?
I think we can clearly see from the growing emphasis in the industry and
 the steady flow of news reports that LNG as a ship fuel is really 
starting to gather momentum. So I expect that over the next few years we
 will see an increasingly rapid uptake of this technology, spreading at 
first from areas where ECAs will soon enter into force and then as 
bunkering infrastructure grows and spreads from regional through to the 
major trade routes. 
The publication of the EU Clean Fuel Strategy also shows how this 
development might progress, with the plan proposing that LNG refuelling 
stations be installed in all 139 maritime and inland ports on the Trans 
European Core Network by 2020 and 2025 respectively. So in the next 5 to
 10 year I think we can expect to have a market that is fairly well 
developed.
2012 saw the emergence of the so-called "Eco Ships" in the 
market, which are usually commanding a premium price, versus more 
conventional new building vessels. Many ship owners still appear to be 
sceptical towards those vessels, claiming that their advertised benefits
 in terms of fuel consumption are still unproven. What's your view on 
this? Are Eco Ships going to dominate the market in the coming years and
 why?
In a word – YES. A split between newly optimized Eco ships and less 
efficient tonnage has the potential of splitting the world fleet into 
the haves and have-nots. Fuel efficiency is now the biggest lever to 
increase cost competitiveness with bunkers costs rising to more than one
 third of a vessel’s total operating costs. The best operators have 
already taking note of this trend, with a study conducted by GL’s 
consultancy subsidiary FutureShip revealing that the differences in 
design efficiency in major container liner fleets was substantial. Top 
players in the market were designing and building vessels to the IMO’s 
2025 EEDI reference line today – some 30% more efficient that the 
average vessel. The new GL class Carisbrooke Super Green 8500 Vessels, 
for example, utilised a number of features which resulted in a 30% lower
 EEDI. The four dry cargo vessels have a hydro-dynamically optimized 
hull form, special bow form, and an extremely large and efficient ducted
 propeller, all of which result in an extremely efficient vessel..
In a multi-tier market that differentiates between vessels based on 
their efficiency, this will result in significantly improved employment 
opportunities and earnings for energy optimised vessels. These benefits 
stem from three sources: the design of new vessels for lower speed, the 
utilization of state-of- the-art optimisation technology and services, 
and significantly lower newbuilding prices. With the entry of optimised 
vessels into the market, cost pressures on existing vessels will 
continue to mount, making the importance of making efficiency gains, 
especially in operational strategies, increasingly important.
We are already seeing owner/operators – Maersk in a notable example in 
2012 – refitting relatively new existing ships to make them more 
efficient for slower speed operation. This is a trend that is not going 
away and the best operators are already well ahead on this front. 
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