In This Article:
Key Insights
-
Ceres to acquire 60 CO2 vessels.
-
CCUS market to hit $55 billion by 2030.
-
10 Gigatons CO2 capture by 2070, 7.6 Giga by 2050.
Opportunities in the energy market are not only natural gas or LNG projects, but also the need for increased CO2 capturing and storage in future. To grab part of the market developments, British listed Greek shipping company Ceres Shipping, owned by Panagiotis Livanos, is entering full force into the CO2 shipping sector.
CERES targeting 50 million tons CO2 2035
Ceres announced that it has signed an agreement to acquire 60 CO2 transport vessels in a move to transport around 50 million tons of CO2 by 2035. The company also has stated that it will be investing in the necessary terminals to support all. The company is expecting to be able to transport around 5 million tons of CO2 by 2025.
Ceres has set up a new company, called ECOLOG, which will be the operator of the 60 vessels and terminals. According to Livanos, the market will need additional maritime transport options to tackle the demand the coming years. Livanos stated they will be investing into all aspects of Carbon Capture Utilization and Storage (CCUS), as needed to comply to the net-zero targets set for 2050. At present technical developments are up-to-date to reap the rewards available. CO2 transportation is in line with liquified natural gas technology and carriers requirements.
Carbon capture and storage in geological formations (CCS) consists of capturing CO2 from industrial facilities, ships and transporting. After that it will be stored underground into suitable underground geological formations. The plans of ECOLOG are now to set up a maritime network to connect CO2 emitter to storage facilities at lower costs.
ECOLOG is mainly supported by Ceres Shipping, who is already investing in both LNG via GasLog and bulk dry cargo transportation via DryLog. As stated by ECOLOG it will have the first of their kind in with a minimum of 20,000 cubic meters (local transport) to 85,000 cubic meters (longer distance). The company expects that each of its vessels to be transporting over 1 million tons of CO2 per year.
New market entries targeting CO2 maritime transportation Europe
Ceres is not the only one currently looking at the CO2 maritime transportation market. The last days EverLoNG stated that it will be conducting technology trials on board two LNG-fuelled ships. A cross-boundary project involving science and industry experts has landed €3.4 million (total budget €4.9M) from an EU climate action fund to accelerate the uptake of ship-based carbon capture (SBCC) by international shipping companies. The ships are being owned and operated by French oil and gas giant TotalEnergies and Heerema Marine Contractors. At the same time, the trials, which are backed by 16 European partners, is targeting the development of full-chain carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) networks.