iMarine

Maersk names latest vessel of its dual-fuel methanol fleet “Alexandra Mærsk”

Integrated container logistics company Maersk has celebrated the naming of its latest dual-fuel methanol container vessel “Alexandra Maersk”. UK’s Maritime Minister Mike Kane, representatives of the IMO, customers and Maersk employees joined the festive event at the Port of Felixstowe, UK.

“Alexandra Maersk” is the sixth vessel in Maersk’s owned fleet being able to sail on methanol in its main and auxiliary engines. It is the fifth ship in a series of 18 large dual-fuel methanol vessels scheduled for delivery in 2024 and 2025. Each can carry more than 16,000 standard containers (TEU).

The new methanol enabled ships are at the core of Maersk’s ambitious decarbonisation plans as low emission methanol can reduce the greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 65% to 90% compared to conventional fossil fuels such as bunker oil (depending on the feedstock and production process of the methanol, calculated on a life cycle basis).

Following the tradition of naming Maersk vessels after members of the founding family, “Alexandra Maersk” is named after Alexandra Mærsk-Møller (1868-1953) who was an older sister of Mr. A.P. Møller, the founder of A.P. Moller – Maersk.

Maersk has set itself ambitious goals for decarbonising logistics on ocean and across its whole business with a net-zero target in 2040. The pathway to net-zero has been tested and approved by the Science Target Based initiative (STBi). Reduced GHG emission fuels are key to achieving the target. The exact emission reduction of green methanol depends on the production process and how feedstock and produced methanol is being transported.

While methanol made from biogenic feedstock reaches around 65-70% GHG emission reduction on a life cycle basis compared to conventional fossil fuel, the synthetically produced green methanol, the so called e-methanol, aims to reach much higher levels of GHG emission savings of up to 90% on a life cycle basis.

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