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Vitol targets Asia biofuel growth with specialist barges

Vitol targets Asia biofuel growth with specialist barges
Vitol’s Singaporean bunker operations company, V-Bunkers, has received awards for 5 of its fleet of 20 bunker barges. The awards were presented by Ms Quah Ley Hoon (left), Chief Executive of the Maritime Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) to Mike Muller, Head of Vitol Asia at the 55th Singapore Registry of Ships Forum (photo courtesy Vitol).

The Netherlands-headed energy and petroleum products trader Vitol Group (Vitol) is strengthening its position in Asia’s expanding biofuel market, with the delivery of specialised bunker barges to Singapore in 2024.

From early next year, Vitol through its wholly-owned subsidiaries V-Bunkers and Vitol Bunkers will be able to offer a range of biofuel blends, from B24, B30, and even up to B100 if customers request it.

Currently, all vessels delivering bunker fuel in Singapore are oil tankers. These are permitted to only supply a fuel blended with biofuel up to 25 percent concentration.

Any greater and IMO regulations stipulate a ‘IMO Type 2 chemical tanker’ ship is required.

The first IMO-Type 2 barge ordered by V-Bunkers will be delivered in January 2024, to be followed by several more throughout 2024. Depending on demand, these vessels could also be upgraded to supply methanol.

Bio- and e-methanol are also significant pathways for the industry to achieve decarbonization and there have been a number of specialist dual-fuel methanol-powered vessels on order for delivery starting from next year.

Though at a nascent stage, demand for biofuel is expected to grow significantly in the coming years, as the shipping industry looks at ways to decarbonize and curb emissions.

The delivery of specialist barges is an exciting development for Vitol and its sustainability offerings in Asia. As the shipping industry steps up its pursuit of decarbonization solutions, barges that can deliver bunker fuel with a much higher concentration of biofuels represent a material step in the right direction, said Mike Muller, Head of Vitol Asia.

Range of solutions and fuels

Shipping is considered a hard-to-abate sector, with no single technology or solution expected to solve the emissions problem. Rather, it will be a range of solutions to aid decarbonization, with a switch to less-polluting fuels a notable option.

Biofuels, which can be in the form of methane, methanol, or fuel oil/gas oil blends, are seen as a convenient way for shipping companies to reduce their carbon emissions due to their ability to be used as a ‘drop-in fuel’.

It is this flexibility that lends itself to the shipping industry. In Singapore, volumes of B24 biofuel have increased, with sales of more than 50,000 tonnes in August, according to the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA). And year-to-date sales are already more than double those in 2022.

This trend is expected to continue into 2024, particularly with the International Maritime Organisation’s (IMO) interim guidelines on biofuels becoming effective from October 1, 2023.

These stipulate that certified biofuel will be able to reduce a vessel’s Carbon Intensity Indicator (CII) due to its near-zero carbon factor on a well-to-wake (WTW) basis.

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