Wed 1 Jul 2009 09:27

July 1st: New fuel-burning requirements in California


Ship operators will be required to comply with new distillate fuel regulation from today.



Today marks the enforcement of the first significant regulation for the reduction of sulphur in marine fuel in North America.

A new regulation by the California Air Resources Board (CARB) will from today require shipowners operating within 24 miles of the California coastline to burn either marine gas oil (MGO), with a maximum of 1.5% sulphur, or marine diesel oil (MDO), with a maximum of 0.50% sulfur in their main engines, auxiliary engines or boilers.

Thereafter, beginning January 1, 2012, vessel operators will be required to use MGO or MDO with a maximum 0.10% sulphur in their main and auxiliary engines.

Operators who fail to comply with the rules would be subject to fines, penalties and potential exclusions from the ports of California.

Please find a summary of the fuel requirements in California in the table below:

Fuel Requirement Effective Date Fuel
Phase I July 1st 2009 Marine gas oil (DMA) at or below 1.5% sulphur; or Marine diesel oil (DMB) at or below 0.5% sulphur
Phase II Jan 1st 2012 Marine gas oil (DMA) or Marine diesel oil at or below 0.1% sulphur
In order to ensure compliance, CARB has recommended that :-

(i) Vessel crews are thoroughly familiar with the operational procedures used to switch fuels in main engines, auxiliary engines and auxiliary boilers.

(ii) Sufficient quantities of the specified “Phase I” cleaner fuels are onboard the vessel prior to making a California port visit.

(iii) Vessel crews understand the relevant record-keeping requirements.

Additional information, including special provision for noncompliance, can be found at www.arb.ca.gov/marine and a copy of the regulation is available from the address below:

www.arb.ca.gov regact/2008/fuelogv08/fuelogv08.htm

Preemraff Göteborg, Preem's wholly owned refinery in Gothenburg, Sweden. VARO Energy expands renewable portfolio with Preem acquisition  

All-cash transaction expected to complete in the latter half of 2025.

Pictured: Biofuel is supplied to NYK Line's Noshiro Maru. The vessel tested biofuel for Tohoku Electric Power in a landmark first for Japan. NYK trials biofuel in milestone coal carrier test  

Vessel is used to test biofuel for domestic utility company.

Pictured (from left): H-Line Shipping CEO Seo Myungdeuk and HJSC CEO Yoo Sang-cheol at the contract signing ceremony for the construction of an 18,000-cbm LNG bunkering vessel. H-Line Shipping orders LNG bunkering vessel  

Vessel with 18,000-cbm capacity to run on both LNG and MDO.

Stanley George, VPS Group Technical and Science Manager, VPS. How to engineer and manage green shipping fuels | Stanley George, VPS  

Effective management strategies and insights for evolving fuel use.

Sweden flag with water in background. Swedish government bans scrubber wastewater discharges  

Discharges from open-loop scrubbers to be prohibited in Swedish waters from July 2025.

The ME-LGIA test engine at MAN's Research Centre Copenhagen. MAN Energy Solutions achieves 100% load milestone for ammonia engine  

Latest tests validate fuel injection system throughout the entire load curve.

Terminal Aquaviário de Rio Grande (TERIG), operated by Transpetro. Petrobras secures ISCC EU RED certification for B24 biofuel blend at Rio Grande  

Blend consisting of 24% FAME is said to have been rigorously tested to meet international standards.

Avenir LNG logo on sea background. Stolt-Nielsen to fully control Avenir LNG with acquisition  

Share purchase agreement to buy all shares from Golar LNG and Aequitas.

Seaspan Energy's 7,600 cbm LNG bunkering vessel, s1067, built by Nantong CIMC Sinopacific Offshore & Engineering Co., Ltd. Bureau Veritas supports launch of CIMC SOE's LNG bunkering vessel  

Handover of Seaspan Energy's cutting-edge 7,600-cbm vessel completed.

The world's first methanol-fuelled container ship, Laura Maersk. Methanol as a marine fuel | Steve Bee, VPS  

How environmental legislation has driven the development of low-sulphur fuels and methanol-ready ships.


↑  Back to Top