Tue 20 Feb 2018, 08:00 GMT

ABS issues SOx and NOx emissions reminder


Association provides summary guide on SOx and NOx emissions standards.



Ship SOx and NOx Emissions Reminder

Source: American Bureau of Shipping (ABS)

SOx emissions

1. MARPOL Annex VI Regulation 14 limits the fuel oil sulphur content to any fuel oil used onboard all ships, new and existing, operating with an International Air Pollution Prevention Certificate.

2. The current 3.5% m/m global limit for the sulphur content of fuel oil will reduce to 0.50% m/m as of 1 January 2020.

3. Within Emission Control Areas (Baltic, North Sea, USA/Canada and USA/Caribbean), the limit for the sulphur content of fuel oil of 0.1% m/m remains in place today. However, prior to 1 January 2020, the sulphur content limit does not apply to ships operating in the North American area or the United States Caribbean Sea which are built on or before 1 August 2011 and powered by propulsion boilers that were not originally designed for continued operation on marine distillate fuel or natural gas.

4. The sulphur content of fuel oil used onboard ships certified under MARPOL VI, is not permitted to exceed the global and ECA limits, unless the ship is fitted with an approved ‘Equivalent’ under Regulation 4 of Annex VI such as a SOx exhaust gas cleaning system (scrubber).

5. Ships intending to comply by using separate fuel oils when entering or exiting an ECA are to carry onboard a written fuel changeover procedure. The fuel changeover date, time, position of the ship, and volume of fuel oil in each tank are to be recorded in the fuel changeover log book.

6. Ship operators should also take into account regional requirements that may apply, for example:

- Australia Sydney Harbor Low Sulphur Fuel Limits

- China Sulfur Limit - ABS Regulatory Update

- EU Sulphur Directive 2012/33/EU

NOx emissions

7. The MARPOL Annex VI Regulation 13 NOx limits apply to marine diesel engines (any reciprocating internal combustion engine operating on liquid fuel, dual fuel or gaseous fuel only) with a power output of more than 130kW, except engines used solely for emergencies or installed on ships of a certain age and operating in certain areas.

8. The application of the marine diesel engine NOx limits is linked with the ship's construction date, i.e. the date the keels of which were laid, or at a similar stage of construction.

9. The Tier III NOx emission standard applies to marine diesel engines installed on ships constructed on/after:

- 1 January 2016 and which operate in the North American ECA or the U.S. Caribbean Sea ECA; and

- 1 January 2021 and which operate in the North Sea ECA (including the English Channel) and the Baltic Sea ECA.

10. Three exemptions are provided for marine diesel engines installed:

- on purely recreational ships with a length < 24 m

- on a ship with a combined propulsion power < 750 kW if it is demonstrated that the ship cannot comply with Tier III because of design or construction limitations of the ship; and

- on purely recreational ships constructed prior to 1 January 2021 of less than 500 GT and with a length ? 24 m.

11. The operating Tier level and on/off status of Tier II/Tier III certified engines and Tier II certified engines are to be recorded when the ship enters into, and exits from, the above mentioned ECAs, and when the on/off status changes within an ECA, together with the date, time and position of the ship. Prior to entry into the applicable NOx ECA, sufficient time must be allowed for the tier change-over, to ensure Tier III compliance upon entry into the ECA. A written procedure showing how the tier change-over is to be done is to be carried onboard.

12. In the event a ship mentioned in item 9 was not initially fitted with Tier III compliant marine diesel engines, because trading in the above mentioned ECAs was not envisaged at the time of build, but subsequently intends to operate in these ECAs, the engines will need to be modified and certified to meet the Tier III NOx standards.

13. Emission abatement technologies applied to marine diesel engines to achieve Tier III NOx compliance include:

- Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR)

- Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR)

Further information

14. For further information and requirements on SOx and NOx exhaust emission abatement technologies, refer to:

- Global Sulphur Gap - 2020

- ABS Advisory on Exhaust Gas Scrubber Systems

- ABS Advisory on Fuel Switching

- ABS Guide for Exhaust Emission Abatement

- ABS Guide for SOx Scrubber Ready Vessels


Varsha Sudheer, Island Oil. Island Oil appoints Varsha Sudheer as senior trader in Dubai  

Marine fuel supplier strengthens trading platform with new hire at recently established UAE hub.

Bitoil Group logo. Bitoil Group seeks bunker trader for Dubai operations  

Dubai-based company is recruiting for a senior bunker trader role to manage global fuel sales and procurement.

Hiring concept with puzzle pieces and a magnifying glass. Uni-Fuels seeks bunker traders for new London operation  

Singapore-headquartered firm advertises position as part of UK expansion.

Hiring concept with puzzle pieces. Uni-Fuels seeks bunker traders for new Piraeus office  

Nasdaq-listed marine fuel provider advertises positions as part of expansion into Greek market.

Sleipner RoRo vessel render. Wing sails could cut fuel use by 9% on expedition cruise vessels, study finds  

Wallenius Marine and Salén Ship Management examine wind propulsion potential beyond cargo shipping.

C-Flexer RoRo vessel render. Stena RoRo orders C-Flexer RoRo vessels with battery-hybrid propulsion for 2029 delivery  

Swedish shipowner places order with China Merchants Industry for next-generation vessels designed by NAOS.

IMO Technical Seminar on Marine Biofuels graphic. IMO to host technical seminar on marine biofuels in February  

Event at London headquarters will examine recent experiences and future prospects for biofuels in shipping.

Maritime Cleantech Enabling Ammonia Bunkering seminar graphic. H2SITE to present ammonia cracking technology at Bergen maritime seminar  

Spanish firm to showcase dual-environment hydrogen production system for vessels and ports at Maritime CleanTech event.

The Arctic and black carbon graphic. Clean Arctic Alliance urges Canada, Iceland and Norway to back polar fuels proposal at IMO  

Environmental coalition calls on three Arctic nations to support Denmark-led measure on black carbon emissions.

Valenciaport and Port of Santos MoU signing. Valencia and Santos ports establish green corridor to decarbonise transatlantic trade  

Ports sign agreement to promote low-emission fuels and shore power on Europe–South America route.