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Maersk to launch first carbon neutral ship within two years
by AFP Staff Writers
Copenhagen (AFP) Feb 17, 2021

Danish shipping giant AP Moller-Maersk announced Wednesday it would launch the "world's first carbon neutral" vessel by 2023, seven years ahead of its initial target.

Originally scheduled for 2030, the company said in a statement that the launch had been "fast-tracked by advances in technology and increasing customer demand for sustainable supply chains."

The ship will run on bio-methanol and will be deployed in one of Maersk's "intra-regional networks."

Maersk also noted that around half of its 200 largest customers have already set, or are in the process of setting, "ambitious science-based or zero carbon targets for their supply chains, and the figure is on the rise."

The shipping giant previously operated a massive oil division, but sold it to France's Total in 2017 and aims to go completely carbon neutral by 2050.

In 2020, it reported a drop of nearly 42 percent in emissions for the year as a whole. The company operates in 130 countries and employs some 80,000 people worldwide.

cbw/hdy/jll/bmm

A.P. MOELLER-MAERSK

TOTAL


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ENERGY NEWS
Getting to net zero and even negative is surprisingly feasible, and affordable
Berkeley CA (SPX) Jan 28, 2021
Reaching zero net emissions of carbon dioxide from energy and industry by 2050 can be accomplished by rebuilding U.S. energy infrastructure to run primarily on renewable energy, at a net cost of about $1 per person per day, according to new research published by the Department of Energy's Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab), the University of San Francisco (USF), and the consulting firm Evolved Energy Research. The researchers created a detailed model of the entire U.S. energy and ... read more

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