A clear and supportive legislative framework is critical to enabling onboard carbon capture and storage (OCCS) and unlocking timely investment across the ship and LCO2 offloading value chain. This follows from a DNV report commissioned by five leading shipping companies.
The report was initiated by the five liners after the Port of Rotterdam Authority brought together more than 25 parties last year to support the development of the CO2 capture and storage chain through the establishment of the OCCS chain. The shipping companies involved – CMA CGM, Evergreen, Hapag-Lloyd, Maersk and MSC – see OCCS as a promising solution to decarbonise in addition to the use of low-carbon and carbon-free fuels.
The report, produced by DNV, aims to provide insight into how CO2 capture on board ships can contribute to reducing emissions, including considerations for shipowners, the potential of the technology and the need for a clear legislative framework. According to the report, regulation is the biggest bottleneck: IMO guidelines for OCCS are under development, EU regulations do not yet provide a complete framework, and legal clarity is needed on cross-border CO2-transport and the status of CO2 (waste or raw material).
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Focus areas
Three key focus areas of the report are:
- Physical value chain: Development of a liquid CO2-chain (LCO2), in which CO2 is captured on board, liquefied and transferred to LCO2-receiving vessels in ports. These vessels deliver CO2 to (interim) storage terminals in Rotterdam and Singapore for subsequent transport to final sequestration sites.
- CO2 abatement and downstream economic opportunity: Analysis using DNV’s GHG Pathway Model to gain insight into reduction and transshipment capacity based on the fleet serving this corridor. The report highlights the CO2 abatement potential and economic opportunity for the downstream OCCS value chain.
- Regulatory framework: Investments in capture installations, transport capacity and permanent storage facilities are only feasible if supporting regulations are introduced in a timely manner.
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Pilot on the Asia North-Europe trade route
As a next step, the five shipping companies propose to use the Asia North Europe trade lane as a test environment for an OCCS corridor. This busy shipping route is suitable for large-scale application of OCCS due to its high emissions, predictable timetables and CO2-storage projects in Rotterdam and around Singapore.
Pilot projects demonstrate that the technology is technically feasible, scalable and safe. In order to make OCCS work on a large scale, the chain must be developed with ships that can transport liquid CO2, storage and transshipment terminals and stores.
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First pilot project in Rotterdam successfully completed
The first captured CO2 from a ship was unloaded in Rotterdam last year. Container ship Ever Top, owned by shipping company Evergreen, brought a tank container with 20 tonnes of liquid CO2 ashore, after previously unloading the same amount in Shanghai.
The Ever Top (14,000 TEU) is the first medium-sized container ship with a CO2 capture installation (SMDERI). The installation captures CO2, cleans it and converts it into liquid form for storage on board. As part of a separate project, DNV confirmed that the quality would be suitable for (re)use in greenhouse horticulture.
To support the realisation of OCCS, the Port of Rotterdam Authority is developing chains for the storage and reuse of CO2 within the port industrial complex. Companies like Value Maritime, Wärtsilä en SMDERI are already equipping vessels with capture systems.







