Assessment of Cold Ironing and LNG as Mitigation Tools of Short Sea Shipping Emissions in Port: A Spanish Case Study

By the end of 2025 European ports are required to provide (Directive 2014/94/EU) facilities to ensure the Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) use and on-shore electricity supply for vessels (Cold Ironing—CI). Even though this involves considerable port investment, many uncertainties about CI and LNG perform...

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Main Authors: Alba Martínez-López, Alejandro Romero, José A. Orosa
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-02-01
Series:Applied Sciences
Subjects:
LNG
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/5/2050
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spelling doaj-56ec94632171458eab66fc4de64165292021-02-26T00:05:53ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172021-02-01112050205010.3390/app11052050Assessment of Cold Ironing and LNG as Mitigation Tools of Short Sea Shipping Emissions in Port: A Spanish Case StudyAlba Martínez-López0Alejandro Romero1José A. Orosa2Department of Mechanical Engineering, University of Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, 35014 Las Palmas de Gran Canaria, SpainOceanic Platform of the Canary Islands (PLOCAN), 35214 Telde, SpainDepartment of Nautical Science and Marine Engineering, E.T.S.N.M., University of A Coruña, 15011 Coruña, SpainBy the end of 2025 European ports are required to provide (Directive 2014/94/EU) facilities to ensure the Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) use and on-shore electricity supply for vessels (Cold Ironing—CI). Even though this involves considerable port investment, many uncertainties about CI and LNG performance exist because their application depends on vessel operators’ willingness. Additionally, lag times for CI connection/disconnection along with methane emissions from LNG undermine their feasibility for Short Sea Shipping (SSS). Since, among the SSS aims are the reduction in berthing times and its effectiveness for inter-islands’ traffic where, land electricity grids are frequently dependent on the fuel burning generation by penalizing the CI performance. This paper introduces a calculation method to evaluate the pollution savings in monetary terms by CI and LNG use in SSS. The method is applied to three European routes by testing the environmental performance of two fleets: feeder and Ro-Pax vessels. The results show that feeders reach higher environmental improvements by using port mitigation than Ro-Pax vessels. Additionally, the need for ensuring the sustainability of on-shore grids before the CI implementation was evinced, especially in insularity frameworks, where the environmental benefits from LNG use proved to be more effective.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/5/2050short sea shippingcold ironingon-shore power supplyLNGport sustainability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alba Martínez-López
Alejandro Romero
José A. Orosa
spellingShingle Alba Martínez-López
Alejandro Romero
José A. Orosa
Assessment of Cold Ironing and LNG as Mitigation Tools of Short Sea Shipping Emissions in Port: A Spanish Case Study
Applied Sciences
short sea shipping
cold ironing
on-shore power supply
LNG
port sustainability
author_facet Alba Martínez-López
Alejandro Romero
José A. Orosa
author_sort Alba Martínez-López
title Assessment of Cold Ironing and LNG as Mitigation Tools of Short Sea Shipping Emissions in Port: A Spanish Case Study
title_short Assessment of Cold Ironing and LNG as Mitigation Tools of Short Sea Shipping Emissions in Port: A Spanish Case Study
title_full Assessment of Cold Ironing and LNG as Mitigation Tools of Short Sea Shipping Emissions in Port: A Spanish Case Study
title_fullStr Assessment of Cold Ironing and LNG as Mitigation Tools of Short Sea Shipping Emissions in Port: A Spanish Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of Cold Ironing and LNG as Mitigation Tools of Short Sea Shipping Emissions in Port: A Spanish Case Study
title_sort assessment of cold ironing and lng as mitigation tools of short sea shipping emissions in port: a spanish case study
publisher MDPI AG
series Applied Sciences
issn 2076-3417
publishDate 2021-02-01
description By the end of 2025 European ports are required to provide (Directive 2014/94/EU) facilities to ensure the Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) use and on-shore electricity supply for vessels (Cold Ironing—CI). Even though this involves considerable port investment, many uncertainties about CI and LNG performance exist because their application depends on vessel operators’ willingness. Additionally, lag times for CI connection/disconnection along with methane emissions from LNG undermine their feasibility for Short Sea Shipping (SSS). Since, among the SSS aims are the reduction in berthing times and its effectiveness for inter-islands’ traffic where, land electricity grids are frequently dependent on the fuel burning generation by penalizing the CI performance. This paper introduces a calculation method to evaluate the pollution savings in monetary terms by CI and LNG use in SSS. The method is applied to three European routes by testing the environmental performance of two fleets: feeder and Ro-Pax vessels. The results show that feeders reach higher environmental improvements by using port mitigation than Ro-Pax vessels. Additionally, the need for ensuring the sustainability of on-shore grids before the CI implementation was evinced, especially in insularity frameworks, where the environmental benefits from LNG use proved to be more effective.
topic short sea shipping
cold ironing
on-shore power supply
LNG
port sustainability
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/11/5/2050
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