Increased energy efficiency in short sea shipping through decreased time in port
Journal article, 2015

According to a range of assessments, there exists a large cost-effective potential to increase energy efficiency in shipping through reduced speed at sea enabled by shorter time in port. This means that the energy needed can be reduced whilst maintaining the same transport service. However, the fact that a large cost-effective potential has been identified that is not being harnessed by decision-makers in practice suggests that there is more to this potential to understand. In this paper, the possibilities for increasing energy efficiency by reducing waiting time in port are explored and problematised through a case study of a short sea bulk shipping company transporting dry bulk goods mainly in the North and Baltic seas. Operational data from two ships in the company’s fleet for one year showed that the ships spent more than 40% of their time in ports and that half of the time in port was not productive. The two most important reasons for the large share of unproductive time were that ports were closed on nights and weekends and that ships arrived too early before the stevedores were ready to load or unload the cargo. Reducing all of the unproductive time may be difficult, but the results also show that even a conservative estimate of one to four hours of reduced time per port call would lead to a reduction in energy use of 2-8%. From in-depth interviews with employees of the shipping company, ports and ship agencies, a complex picture is painted when attempting to understand how this potential arises. Aspects such as a lack of effective ship-shore-port communication, little time for ship operators, an absence of means for accurately predicting energy use of voyages as a function of speed, perceived risk of arriving too late, and relationships with third-party technical management may all play a role.

Port operations

Energy efficiency

Slow steaming

Short sea dry bulk shipping

Author

Hannes Johnson

Chalmers, Shipping and Marine Technology, Maritime Environmental Sciences

Linda Styhre

IVL Swedish Environmental Research Institute

Transportation Research Part A: Policy and Practice

0965-8564 (ISSN)

Vol. 71 167-178

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Transport

Energy

Subject Categories

Other Engineering and Technologies

DOI

10.1016/j.tra.2014.11.008

More information

Latest update

3/7/2018 1