RICARDO PLAYS LEADING ROLE IN NORTH SEA GREEN CORRIDOR PROJECT

Dec 3, 2024 | Marine environment & clean shipping news

UK engineering consultancy Ricardo will be the lead environmental consultancy in the next phase of the development of the ‘Green North Sea Shipping Corridor Project’, seeking to create a green shipping corridor (GSC) between the Port of Tyne (UK) and Port of Ijmuiden (Amsterdam).

The project, which includes partners from the two ports, ferry operator DFDS and maritime data and communication provider KSVA, is part of a £9m investment package announced by the UK Maritime Minister, Mike Kane MP, in October 2024, aiming to decarbonise shipping.

Green corridors are zero emission maritime routes between two or more ports. As the lead environmental consultancy, Ricardo will provide its expertise and insight in sustainable shipping and low-carbon fuels choice to help determine a viable path for decarbonisation between the two ports.

Matthew Moss, Ricardo Maritime Sustainable Transport Senior Consultant, said: “Green corridors represent a crucial milestone on the path to maritime decarbonisation. By focusing on predictable routes and consistent operational profiles, they lower barriers to adoption and create momentum for sustainable change. At Ricardo, we leverage our expertise in vessel and port decarbonisation to support these transformative projects, delivering insights that build resilient infrastructure and robust fuel supply chains for a greener future.”

Matt Beeton, CEO Port of Tyne, said: “This initiative represents another step forward for the port in our sustainability journey.  By establishing this green corridor between the Port of Tyne and the Port of IJmuiden, we aim to significantly reduce carbon emissions between the Northeast of England and northern Europe, with the aim of saving up to 850,000t of CO2 annually. The success of this project will bring more green jobs to the region and drive the development of port infrastructure for electrification and the refuelling of state-of-the-art clean powered vessels.”

Peter van de Meerakker, MD Zeehaven IJmuiden, said: “This project is very important for us, as we need to accelerate the reduction of our shipping emissions. With the ‘zero emission’ new tonnage of DFDS, we are taking an important step forward, since a lot needs still to be done on both sides of the North Sea and this project helps enormously speed up and achieve our goals.”

Declan Walsh of DFDS concluded: “DFDS is committed to becoming a carbon neutral transport and logistics company by 2050 and the decarbonisation of our Passenger business is a key part of this journey. Transforming our current Amsterdam-Newcastle route to a ro-pax green corridor is a massive undertaking and we are fortunate to have such great partners to help us make this happen.”

Image: Launch of North Sea Green Corridor project (source: Ricardo)

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