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Quick guide: FuelEU maritime from a commercial shipping perspective

The FuelEU maritime regulation is one of the European union's measures to decarbonise the shipping industry. It sets greenhouse gas intensity limits to ships trading in the EU from 2025, gradually decreasing the intensity over time, by 2% in 2025 to 80% in 2050. Here is a quick guide to the FuelEU maritime, from a commercial shipping perspective.

Siglar Carbon and LSEG partner to cut shipping emissions

For charterers and traders, access to the right insights at the right time might halve emissions from single voyages. On a TC2 voyage 1 300 tonnes of CO2 and its related carbon cost could be avoided by making one single data-based decision. A partnership between London Stock Exchange Group and Siglar Carbon provides actionable emissions data to trading desks, where great carbon and cost reduction potential can be unleashed.

IMO aims for net-zero emissions from international shipping by 2050

In their 80th session, IMO’s Marine Environment Protection Committee agreed to reach net-zero GHG emissions from international shipping ‘by or around’ 2050 and that the mid-term GHG reduction measures, including a maritime GHG emissions pricing mechanism should be finalised and adopted by 2025. Let’s take a closer look at the key outcomes of the meeting.

Emission Schemes

Djibouti Sovereign Carbon Initiative

The Governments of Djibouti and Gabon have introduced sovereign carbon registry frameworks that apply a carbon cost to qualifying ship movements to and from their ports.

African Sovereign Carbon Initiatives: Countries Under Discussion

A growing number of African countries are in active discussion about introducing their own Sovereign Carbon Initiatives for maritime shipping, following the model pioneered by Djibouti (2023) and Gabon (2025). No schemes are yet in force in these countries, but the commercial direction of travel is clear: more African port calls are likely to carry a carbon cost in the coming years.

Türkiye Shipping Greenhouse Gas Emissions Fee

Türkiye has adopted a shipping-specific greenhouse gas fee intended to apply to greenhouse gas emissions from commercial ships calling at, or departing from, Turkish ports for cargo or passenger operations. The operational details are to be defined in secondary regulation that has not yet been published.

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"We want to help sustainable shipowners achieve higher fleet utilization and improved return on their green investments. "

Geir Olafsen, CDO Siglar
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