Following the announcement of six strategic green methanol partnerships across the globe earlier this year, A.P. Moller-Maersk (Maersk) has added a seventh methanol partnership with Chinese bioenergy enterprise Debo on the quest to boost global production capacity.
The parties have signed a Letter of Intent covering Debo’s plans to develop a bio-methanol project for Maersk in China with capacity of 200,00t/yr to start commercial operation by autumn 2024.
Maersk has set an ambitious end-to-end net-zero goal for 2040 and the availability of green methanol at scale is critical to its fleet’s transition to sustainable energy. Partnerships across ecosystems and geographies are essential for the scale-up needed in order to make meaningful progress on this agenda in this decade.
Berit Hinnemann, Head of Green Fuels Sourcing, A.P. Moller-Maersk, said: The feedstock for the green bio-methanol will be agricultural residues. Maersk intends to offtake the full volume produced.”
Zhang Shoujun, Chairman and GM, Debo, added: “The use of green methanol as marine fuel to replace the existing fossil fuel is groundbreaking in the container shipping history and will strongly promote the development of green shipping. It is a great honour for Debo to work with A.P. Moller-Maersk to promote the commercialisation of the green methanol industrial chain. I firmly believe that through the cooperation, we are able to realise the commercial production and industrial conversion of green methanol and contribute to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”
In March 2022, Maersk announced six partnerships with CIMC ENRIC, European Energy, Green Technology Bank, Orsted, Proman, and WasteFuel with the intent of sourcing at least 730,000t/yr by end of 2025 – well beyond the green methanol needed for the first 12 green container vessels currently on order.