Lloyd's List is part of Maritime Intelligence

This site is operated by a business or businesses owned by Maritime Insights & Intelligence Limited, registered in England and Wales with company number 13831625 and address c/o Hackwood Secretaries Limited, One Silk Street, London EC2Y 8HQ, United Kingdom. Lloyd’s List Intelligence is a trading name of Maritime Insights & Intelligence Limited. Lloyd’s is the registered trademark of the Society Incorporated by the Lloyd’s Act 1871 by the name of Lloyd’s.

This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use. For high-quality copies or electronic reprints for distribution to colleagues or customers, please call UK support at +44 (0)20 3377 3996 / APAC support at +65 6508 2430

Printed By

UsernamePublicRestriction

Top Stories

Daily Briefing April 16 2024

Shipping faces more fallout in wake of Iran’s attack on Israel | US-sanctioned ship with unknown flag and insurance had ‘right of innocent passage’, says Denmark | Shipping warned of increasing risks as governments struggle to contain multiplied threats 

Daily Briefing




Analysis and Comment

 

The Lloyd’s List Podcast: Is it possible to order a future-proofed ship today?

Shipping’s boardrooms are struggling with a more complex, more expensive future where there are too many ‘known unknowns’. Future-proofed flexibility is what shipowners are after as they develop their energy transition strategies, but is that really possible? This week’s edition of the podcast explores the ‘least regrets’ options on the table for shipping when it comes to newbuilding and optimisation investment decisions

Lloyd's List The Shipping Podcast Fuels Environment

Special Report: Decarbonisation

Shipping’s decarbonisation trajectory depends on regulation that will be decided over two crucial meetings. Yet there is already growing concern that governments could backslide on promises when the easy ambition statements give way to the difficult detail of climate finance. Click here to view the full report

 

FREE TO READ Containership with sunrise in the North Sea
Is shipping’s decarbonisation revolution about to start slow steaming?

The shipping industry and governments are attempting to negotiate the most difficult and controversial details of a global greenhouse gas reduction strategy amid a backlash against pro-climate policies. Some are more invested in the outcome than others

Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC 80) at the IMO
IMO to adopt practical mid-term measures to put decarbonisation back on track

Secretary-general is optimistic on shipping’s chances of reaching new IMO targets aiming for net zero by or around 2050, as member states prepare to adopt mid-term measures in 2025

MOL logo
Shipping prepares for its first dance with carbon trading

Companies are scrambling to set up trading accounts, while a niche industry springs up to help them manage an unfamiliar market. Data is king, industry readiness is patchy and challenges abound

Höegh Aurora, the first of 12 multi-fuel vehicle carriers
Alternative-fuel newbuilding orders decline as those for bulkers and tankers rise

Already large liner orderbooks have seen commodities carriers, with conventional fuel propulsion systems, make up the greater share of newbuilding orders in recent months. However, any increase in demand for large alternative-fuel bulk carriers and crude tankers could be limited by a lack of shipbuilding capacity

 

The Lloyd’s List Podcast

  

 




UsernamePublicRestriction

Register