
Nuuk, May 19, 2025:- Responding to news published in early May, in Sermitsiaq on how the Greenland government-owned Royal Arctic Line shipping company will move away from heavy fuel oil (HFO) use, ahead of an International Maritime Organization ban taking full effect in 2029, the Clean Arctic Alliance welcomed the move, with Lead Advisor Dr Sian Prior saying:
“By choosing to use cleaner fuels and getting rid of heavy fuel oil ahead of schedule, Royal Arctic Line isn’t just making good business sense, it is ensuring that it can never spill heavy fuel oil in the Arctic, and is also cutting black carbon emissions, a super pollutant that has disproportionate impact on the Arctic and contributes to the melting of sea ice and glaciers”, said Prior.
“This is hugely positive, and I was very pleased when I heard the news. This is a green transition at the highest level. Royal Arctic Line had the opportunity to pollute the sea until 2029, but is now choosing to take the environment and climate seriously and keep the sea clean”, said Kåre Press-Kristensen, senior advisor at Green Global Future – a Clean Arctic Alliance member, quoted in the Sermitsiaq article.
Background:
- Royal Arctic Line (Wikipedia)
- Sermitsiaq (Wikipedia)
- Arctic Heavy Fuel Oil Ban (Clean Arctic Alliance
About the Heavy Fuel Oil Ban – and Why Royal Arctic Line’s News is Welcome
On July 1st 2024, an International Maritime Organization (IMO) ban on the use and carriage of heavy fuel oil (HFO) by Arctic shipping came into force. At first glance, this looks like great news indeed for the Arctic environment, and the people and wildlife who depend upon it.
Unfortunately, it’s not so simple. When the prohibition on use and carriage of polluting heavy fuel oil was agreed by the IMO in June 2021, it included significant loopholes allowing countries to grant waivers, and for shipping companies to make use of exemptions to the ban.
As a result, the ban will only come up to full speed in 2029. Until then, HFO will no longer be allowed to be used or carried for use while sailing in Arctic waters, unless a ship has a protected fuel tank or has been issued with a waiver by an Arctic coastal nation – meaning that potentially around 74% of Arctic shipping remains unaffected by the ban. Yet Arctic shipping is growing. Recent Arctic Council studies of ship activity in the Arctic have shown an increase of 37 percent between 2013 and 2024 and a 108 percent increase in total distance travelled over the same time period.
The ban, in its current form, leaves the Arctic marine environment exposed to the risk of devastating spills of HFO, and to high emissions of black carbon from those ships still using heavy fuels. The IMO has already formally recognised that black carbon is the second largest source of ship climate warming, and it is responsible for around 20% of shipping’s climate impact (on a 20 year basis). Black carbon has a disproportionately high impact when released in and near the Arctic – when emitted from the exhausts of ships burning oil-based fuel and settles onto snow and ice. It accelerates melting and the loss of reflectivity – the albedo effect – which creates a feedback loop that further exacerbates local and global heating.
This is why the Clean Arctic Alliance called on IMO member states, particularly Arctic coastal countries, and Arctic shipping to implement the Arctic HFO ban and enforce it fully with immediate effect – without resorting to loopholes. By doing so, the regulation can significantly reduce the risk of HFO spills and also see co-benefits – reducing air pollution, and slowing down the impacts of climate warming on the Arctic.
IMO Member States, especially Arctic coastal countries, must go farther than the IMO ban by implementing it in ways that truly protect the Arctic from HFO spills and black carbon emissions – and that means refusing to offer loopholes to ship operators.
The shipping industry can seize upon July 1st as a landmark opportunity to demonstrate its willingness to embrace a cleaner future; instead of hiding behind the use of exemptions, shipping companies can instead switch to readily available, relatively cleaner fuels such as diesel or distillate marine fuels, or to alternative forms of propulsion while installing diesel particulate filters. This would not only set an example for other industry players, it would demonstrate that the shipping world is willing and ready to go above and beyond the call of duty and to move towards eventual decarbonisation.
Combining better fuel choices today with the use of existing technology such as filters, ships operating in the Arctic would see black carbon or soot (a component of particulate matter) emissions reductions of more than 90%. As black carbon remains in the atmosphere for only a short period of time, if all shipping in the Arctic used lighter distillate fuels and installed diesel particulate filters – existing technology long used in land transport to reduce diesel fuel emissions – we would see rapid removal of a massive threat to Arctic sea ice – which is crucial for balancing the climate and weather in the Arctic and further afield.
The use of scrubbers, however, must be avoided – they are an excuse to keep using HFO, while transferring air pollution into marine pollution and moving to gas fossil fuels such as LNG simply replaces one potent short-lived but high impact climate pollutant – black carbon – with another – methane. Use of diesel fuel along with the installation of particulate filters or precipitators, as prescribed for other forms of transport, can reduce emissions of black carbon by more than 90 percent quickly and be a solid first step on route to decarbonisation.
ENDS
Contact:
Dave Walsh, Communications Advisor, [email protected], +34 691 826 764
About the Clean Arctic Alliance
Made up of 24 not-for-profit organisations, the Clean Arctic Alliance campaigns to persuade governments to take action to protect the Arctic, its wildlife and its people
Members include: Alaska Wilderness League, Bellona, Clean Air Task Force, Ecology and Development Foundation ECODES, Environmental Investigation Agency, Equal Routes, Eurasian Wildlife and Peoples, Friends of the Earth US, Global Choices, Green Global Future, Green Transition Denmark, Greenpeace, Iceland Nature Conservation Association, International Cryosphere Climate Initiative, Nature And Biodiversity Conservation Union, 90 North Foundation, Ocean Conservancy, Pacific Environment, Seas At Risk, Surfrider Foundation Europe, Stand.Earth, Transport & Environment, WWF and Zero.
More more information visit https://www.cleanarctic.org/