Advanced emissions monitoring of large 
ships calling at EU ports could help save owners and operators of large 
ships up to €9 million/year, according to a new study
 published by sustainable transport group T&E. These savings would 
come from lower operational costs of using automated systems such as 
fuel flow meters or continuous emissions monitoring, which are already 
used by many of the world’s largest shipping companies.
The cost 
savings arise from the electronic collection and reporting of data, 
which doesn’t require man-hours, as well as the accuracy and 
verifiability of the data, which significantly reduces verification 
costs by third parties.
Aoife 
O’Leary, clean shipping officer at Transport & Environment, said: 
“This study clearly shows that the best way to monitor shipping 
emissions is also the cheapest in the long run. When GPS systems became 
available to massively improve the accuracy of ship navigation, no ship 
owner turned a blind eye to the technology just because of an upfront 
capital cost. So, why should the Commission favor the use of inaccurate 
old-fashioned paper receipts when they could promote an accurate, 
real-time fuel monitoring system, enabling real emissions reductions?”
The 
report, for T&E by consultancy CE Delft, concludes that these modern
 monitoring systems also have the potential to enable fuel savings, and 
therefore lower emissions costs, by a significantly greater extent than 
the 2% CO2 cut claimed by the Commission in its proposal.
The 
Commission estimates that CO2 emissions from ships sailing in European 
waters amounted to 180 million tonnes in 2010. If these emissions were 
reported as a country, maritime transport would be Europe’s 8th largest 
emitter.
In June, the Commission proposed
 that all ships calling at EU ports be required to measure and report 
their annual fuel burn and emissions when travelling to/from the EU. As 
it stands, the proposal goes no further than requiring ship owners and 
operators to report fuel consumption based on fuel sales receipts, which
 ships already carry. Advanced, electronic consumption measuring 
methods, which provide ship owners with the necessary information to 
capture real emissions reductions, are mentioned, but not mandated by 
the proposal.
These 
advanced measuring technologies are also able to monitor and report such
 pollutants as sulfur oxides (SOx) and nitrogen oxides (NOx). Air 
pollution from international shipping, of which SOx and NOx emissions 
are a big part, accounts for about 50,000 premature deaths per year in 
Europe.
Due to 
synergies between the EU and International Maritime Organization air 
pollution laws, the CE Delft study suggests that investing in these 
modern systems could also lower the cost of complying with international
 shipping air pollution standards, such as the 2015 sulfur limits.
John 
Maggs of Seas at Risk said: “As the shipping industry pushes back 
against new laws to make shipping greener, this study shows that it 
makes perfect environmental and economic sense to use modern 
technologies and consolidate reporting requirements into one regulation.
 We therefore call on the European Parliament to strengthen the proposal
 to ensure that all harmful pollutants can be more effectively 
controlled.”
Post to be found at:
http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/Shipowners-Could-Save-Millions-Ship-with-Advanced-Emissions-Monitoring--Study-2014-01-09/
 
 
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