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Writer's pictureTenace Offshores Limited

The beginning of methanol era as "Laura Maersk" is named

Today is a banner day on Maersk’s decarbonization path with Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission, in Copenhagen for the naming of the Laura Maersk, the first in a series of methanol-powered box ships Maersk has contracted yards in South Korea to build.

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On a sunny morning in the Danish capital, the ceremony got underway with a Danish choir singing Bob Dylan’s The Times They Are A-Changin’.

Up next came Robert Uggla, Maersk’s chairman, who said of the Danish-flagged feeder ship behind him: “While it is fairly small its importance and impact transcends its dimensions.”

The 2,100 teu Laura Maersk was built at Hyundai MIPO Dockyard. It will serve trades in the Baltic area. The ship’s name is a nod to the Laura steamship, the first vessel to bear the white seven-pointed star Maersk emblem back in the 1880s.

Uggla took a swipe at LNG as an alternative fuel, pointing out that the gas was still a fossil fuel and is “highly damaging” to the environment.

“This very ship has become the catalyst for change,” Uggla told guests, going on to say: “Hopefully this is the beginning of a green revolution in global supply chains.”

For her part, von der Leyen, the ship’s high-profile godmother, hailed Maersk’s “typical Danish foresight” in delivering the “beautiful” Laura Maersk.

“This event is a big deal not only for Europe but for the whole world,” the European Commission boss said.

Also in attendance at the Danish capital was Greg Dolan, CEO of the Methanol Institute, who commented that today’s naming ceremony serves as a demonstration that the shipping industry is embracing methanol as a sustainable fuel fit for the energy transition.

Aware of the rising demand for methanol – not just in shipping, but from other industries – Maersk has been beefing up its global access to the fuel.

C2X, a new, independent company aiming to build, own and operate assets to produce green methanol at scale, was unveiled today. C2X is backed by A.P. Moller Holding and plans to have annual production capacity of more than 3m tons by 2030. It is looking at green methanol projects close to the Suez Canal in Egypt, the port of Huelva in Spain, and the US, India, and Australia.

“Replacing the existing use of fossil methanol with green methanol, and also meeting the growing demand from the use of green methanol as a fuel, requires a step change in the global production capacity of non-fossil methanol,” A.P. Moller Holding, Maersk’s investment arm, stated in a release today.

Towards 2050, the annual demand for methanol could triple to some 300m tonnes, according to Maersk projections.

“There is a pressing environmental requirement to scale the production of green methanol. C2X was founded to enable the energy transition in several hard-to-abate industries, including plastics, glues, textiles, and fuels. I am delighted to see the talented team who have joined C2X, and the strong interest from partners and prospective customers to support the venture’s important purpose and development,” said Uggla, who is also CEO of A.P. Moller Holding.


C2X is majority-owned by A.P. Moller Holding with A.P. Moller-Maersk as a 20% shareholder.

In related news, Amsterdam-headquartered methanol provider OCI Global, which provided fuel for the Laura Maersk’s maiden voyage from Asia to Europe, has unveiled plans to double its green methanol capacity in the US to approximately 400,000 metric tons per year.

OCI has projected growth in the green methanol market of incremental demand of more than 6m tons by 2028, due to the adoption of green methanol as a shipping fuel, based on the 225 dual-fuelled methanol vessels now on order.

Maersk’s proactive stance to invest and secure global access to methanol – now widely seen as shipping’s alternative fuel for the 2020s – comes at a time when shipping is growing to realize not everyone will be able to buy the prized liquid as well as other future fuels.

Class society DNV warned last week that to meet the anticipated demand of 17m tons of oil equivalent annually by 2030, the maritime sector needs to access 30-40% of the projected worldwide carbon-neutral fuel supply.

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