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    Onboard carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) supply chain optimisation: an application to vessels active in the offshore wind industry

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The Analyst: sense of green port duesFeatured

The Analyst: sense of green port dues

October 7th, 2016 Featured, Viewpoints

Hamburg prides itself on being a green port and is promoting cleaner ships. Credit: HHM Lindner | portstrategy.com

READ ALSO

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The Analyst: Amsterdam’s bold move on cruise may be a missed opportunity to promote sustainable cruise tourism
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Onboard carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) supply chain optimisation: an application to vessels active in the offshore wind industry
Onboard carbon capture, utilisation and storage (CCUS) supply chain optimisation: an application to vessels active in the offshore wind industry

De LangenBy Peter de Langen

In a recent academic conference in Hamburg, various papers addressed differentiated port dues for green ships partly to address the European Commission’s evident favouritism of such an approach, writes Peter de Langen.
While the idea is appealing, port policy makers may be overly enthusiastic about their potential impact while ports may see this as a relatively easy way to demonstrate their commitment to the environment.
However, the impact of differentiated port dues may be limited for a number of reasons. Port dues represent only a very small part of the total port costs of ships and the core decisions affecting the green performance of the ship are in the design/purchasing phase.
Quite often, ship owners that lease a ship have no detailed idea on the future deployment of the ship. Even if shipping companies purchase new ships they do not know where these will be deployed in the coming years. Therefore, ports, especially in Europe, offering fairly small discounts on ships with a strong environmental performance cannot really influence design choices.
Furthermore, unless the criteria for green shipping is updated every year, ports will end up giving discounts to new ships as technologies advance further reducing the impact of differentiated port dues as newly-built ships will meet the criteria anyway.
In the car sector, governments provide differentiated taxes for low emission cars, but the criteria are continually re-assessed as technologies evolve. However, adopting this strategy for shipping will increase administrative costs and introduces uncertainty for ship owners, reducing the impact of these charges.
Finally, the ‘transaction costs’ of differentiated port dues are significant, as ships must demonstrate that they qualify for the discount and port authorities have to handle a more complex pricing structure.
In short, for small port authorities I would argue that they have to answer the question: do we want to pursue differentiated pricing even when the impact is very small? The question differs for larger port authorities: how does the impact of our investment in differentiated port dues compare to alternatives to improve the sustainability of the port – for example enabling wind energy in the port area, electric shore power, enabling re-use of heath and steam of industries in the port, and the use of electric vehicles in the port.

First published by The Analyst in his Port Strategy column

Next article What is the future for small container ports?
Previous article EURAM 2017: call for papers

Peter de Langen

Dr. Peter de Langen is the owner and principal consultant of Ports & Logistics Advisory, based in Malaga, Spain and established in 2013. Peter de Langen is part-time professor at Copenhagen Business School and held a part-time position as professor Cargo Transport & Logistics, at Eindhoven University of Technology, from 2009 to 2016, From 2007 to 2013, Peter worked at Port of Rotterdam Authority (PoR), department Corporate Strategy as senior advisor. From 1997 to 2007, he worked at Erasmus University Rotterdam (EUR). Peter is co-director of the knowledge dissemination platform www.porteconomics.eu, co-organiser of conferences and training events and regular speaker at industry conferences on ports and shipping.

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