February 29th, 2024
news
A Sea Change: Sustainable Shipping Solution to Generate Carbon Credits
Gold Standard and Stillstrom have introduced a significant initiative aimed at reducing greenhouse gas emissions within the shipping sector. The ‘Methodology for Emission Reduction by Shore-side or Offshore Electricity Supply System’ promotes using grid electricity and renewable energy when ships are at port, anchorages, or working offshore, representing a crucial advancement in maritime sustainability.
GENEVA, SWITZERLAND – 28 February 2024 – Shipping, vital for global trade, accounts for approximately 3% of global greenhouse gas emissions[1]. These emissions continue in ports and anchorages where ships at a standstill continue to release greenhouse gases and particulate matter – often close to populated areas.
Gold Standard’s methodology, developed in partnership with Stillstrom’s and available for use by any project developer, aims to reduce emissions from ships at anchorages or wind farms by utilising both grid and offshore wind electricity delivered to ships through innovative technology like Stillstrom’s specialised offshore charging solutions.
This methodology is a stride towards a cleaner, more sustainable future for global trade. It underlines our commitment to pioneering solutions that offer tangible incentives for the maritime sector to invest in green technologies. Together, we can chart a course towards a more sustainable horizon.
As a pioneer in developing offshore power and charging solutions, Stillstrom has set its ambition to decarbonise anchorage sites and offshore windfarms around the globe. We are greatly encouraged by the steps taken by Gold Standard to jointly develop this methodology, which will significantly improve the commercial viability of delivering power to vessels offshore.
Stillstrom aims to deploy systems in Europe as early as next year, with the ambition to have five green anchorage zones by 2030. “Those anchorage zones are collectively estimated to eliminate over 100.000 tons of CO2e per year – the equivalent to taking almost 22,000 cars off the road.
This is a pioneering industry and we are issuing a call to action to all stakeholders to take part in decarbonising our local waters.
Every day, thousands of vessels lay idle in anchorages around the globe. These vessels, even while stationary, still consume fossil fuels to power their auxiliary applications, releasing greenhouse gases and particulate matter often close to populated areas. Stillstrom, an A.P. Moller Maersk-owned venture created in 2019, is developing offshore power systems in anchorages and offshore windfarms, that provide clean anchorage zones and charging infrastructure respectively. In addition to the emissions savings, vessels connected to these systems will also reduce noise pollution, sea floor disturbance from anchor drag, and will provide a safe anchor point for the crew onboard the vessels.
The methodology is one of a Gold Standard’s suite of strategies to enhance shipping sustainability. It complements the existing ‘Retrofit Energy Efficiency Measures in Shipping’ methodology, which focuses on upgrading ships to improve their energy efficiency and is supported by the under development ‘GHG emission calculation for Marine fuels and bio bunkers’ methodology.
To see the full details of the methodology please see Gold Standard’s website.
These economies are set to lead shipping’s green transition | World Economic Forum (weforum.org) and Maritime shipping causes more greenhouse gases than airlines » Yale Climate Connections
About Gold Standard
Gold Standard (www.goldstandard.org, @goldstandard) was established in 2003 by WWF and other international NGOs as a best practice standard to help the world #GrowToZero. All Gold Standard-certified projects and programmes accelerate progress toward the Net-Zero ambition of the Paris Climate Agreement while catalyzing impact toward the broader Sustainable Development Goals. Its standard, Gold Standard for the Global Goals, allows climate and development initiatives to quantify, certify, and maximise their impacts toward climate security and sustainable development. Certification against the standard provides the confidence that these results are measured and verified, enabling credible impact reporting. ISEAL Code Compliant and backed by a broad NGO Supporter Network, Gold Standard has 1900+ projects underway in over 90 countries, creating billions of dollars of shared value from climate and development action worldwide.
About Stillstrom
Stillstrom, a business venture owned by A.P. Moller Maersk Group, is a leading global provider of offshore charging concepts, designed to eliminate offshore vessel emissions and facilitate clean offshore charging across the maritime sector.
Founded in Copenhagen Denmark, Stillstrom’s offshore power and charging technology delivers clean energy to vessels of all shapes and sizes, acting as an offshore charging point to hybrid and/or electric vessels, or as a green parking lot to the thousands of vessels idling outside of ports on any given day.
Media Enquiries
For media enquiries please contact: