Submitted:
20 January 2026
Posted:
20 January 2026
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Abstract

Keywords:
1. Introduction: Ship Energy in the Sustainable Era
2. The New Energy Challenge for Shipping: The Background
3. Candidate Fuels for the Shipping of Tomorrow: One Answer Does Not Fit All?
- A.
- Blue: Production from fossil sources (oil, natural gas, etc.) with CCS technology implemented to reduce net emissions.
- B.
- Green: Production from renewable sources (e.g., wind, solar, sustainable biomass) resulting in very low or near-zero net GHG emissions.
- C.
- Turquoise: Typically associated with methane pyrolysis, where the carbon byproduct is solid rather than CO₂, reducing GHG emissions—though the upstream energy source still matters.
- D.
- Grey/Brown: Indicates fossil-based pathways without carbon capture; can also specifically refer to coal-based as “brown.”
- E.
- Pink: Production powered by nuclear energy (low carbon, but not classified as renewable), often through electrolysis for hydrogen and derivative fuels.
- F.
- Black Using black coal or lignite (brown coal) in the hydrogen-making process, these black and brown hydrogen are the absolute opposite of green hydrogen in the hydrogen spectrum and the most environmentally damaging.
- G.
- Yellow hydrogen is a relatively new phrase for hydrogen made through electrolysis using solar power.
- H.
- White hydrogen is a naturally occurring, geological hydrogen found in underground deposits and created through fracking. There are no strategies to exploit this hydrogen at present.
3.1. Alternative Fuels: Current Applications and Future Prospects
- A.
- Main emissions benefits
- B.
- Infrastructure availability, assessing whether the necessary fuel supply chains, bunkering facilities, and logistics networks are in place.
- i.
- Well-to-Wake Emissions – Assessing total emissions from fuel production to onboard combustion [44].
- ii.
- Energy Density & Storage Requirements – Analyzing storage complexity for different fuels [45].
- iii.
- Fuel Scalability & Infrastructure Readiness – Evaluating global bunkering supply network expansion [31].
- iv.
- Economic Feasibility – Considering lifecycle costs, including production, transportation, and onboard utilization [30].
- v.
- Technology Readiness Level, used not only at a composite level but also at a more specific one e.g., TRL of propulsion (TRL P), or for Handling and Storage (TRL H&S) as in [9].
3.2. Supply Chain Prospects for Alternative Shipping Fuels: An Exploration of KPIs
- a)
- Biofuel (FAME): Fatty Acid Methyl Ester
- b)
- Biofuel (HVO): Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil
- c)
- Nuclear (PWR): Pressurized-water reactor
- d)
- Nuclear (LMCR): Liquid metal cooled reactors
- e)
- Nuclear (HTGR): High-temperature gas-cooled reactors
4. A Larger World Fleet: Challenges and Opportunities for Alternative Fuels
- Ocean-going vessels are considered the most likely candidates to transition to ammonia or hydrogen in the long run, although significant technological and safety barriers remain [56].
- Short-sea vessels, particularly prevalent in Northern Europe already benefit from LNG-ready bunkering ports with, for example, the port of Zeebrugge handling already over 150 LNG bunker operations annually [41].
- Cruise operators have already been increasingly interested in methanol and LNG to match strict emission controls near coastal, tourist and ECA areas [57].
4.1. World Fleet Growth and Its Features: Another Scale for a Different Type of Transition?
4.2. Incorporating the Full Decarbonization Impact: The Next Steps
5. Conclusions: Operational Challenges in a Multi-Fuel Future
5.1. Alternative Fuels—Alternative Challenges
- a)
- In terms of economic repercussions, it is possible that an intensification of the climate crisis may result in acceleration of measures which may render obsolete relatively new hardware elements of alternative fuels’ propulsion systems; in the case of older vessels this may render the ship itself obsolete due to the limited amortization period.
- b)
- Any need for significant modifications in ship hardware, e.g. engine(s) - or eventually for replacement of vessels themselves due to new fuel requirements - should be considered in the context of any Life-Cycle Assessment of alternative fuels. Any such approach should extend beyond methods of production, treatment, distribution etc. of fuels through any classic LCA methodology – even an all-encompassing and detailed well-to-wake one [12] – and should include the hardware dimension as well for all ships a view shared, along with the initial suggestion of the authors in [25], by [68] when analyzing the case of ammonia.
- c)
- Managerial aspects involve primarily the need to secure a properly serviced network of energy sources for the fleet having to take now into account alternative fuels as well; this is especially relevant to network-based operations such as liner shipping [69].
- d)
- Electricity/battery-based solutions – currently mostly chosen in the case of small ferries/ passenger ships which operate in many, though not all, ways as in the container case discussed by [15] - seem to point to additional constraints for ocean-going vessels. Large freight ships have reduced autonomy considering the length of their standard voyages and the current lack of global density of fuel supply chain networks.
- e)
- Finally, the repercussions of parallel fuel supply chains - and of new fuels in general - for shipping operations may be substantial hindering the optimization of the latter put forward as a complementary strategy [70]. The issue of necessary skills [17] required for each fuel and respective propulsion system is a crucial aspect, if the industry quickly evolves into a “multi-vessel energy source” future, with potentially multiple fuel distribution networks. While prioritizing training for fuels which would likely dominate in the near term, such as LNG and methanol, to ensure seafarers are adequately prepared for the evolving energy landscape [65] is proposed, the overall shortage of seafarers, especially at the level of officers [71] may accentuate gaps further.
5.2. The Need for Further Research and Smart Policy Response Amidst the Climate Crisis
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
| BWM | Best-Worst Method |
| CV | Coefficient of Variation |
| DWT | Deadweight Tonnage |
| FAME | Fatty Acid Methyl Ester |
| GHG | Green House Gases |
| HTGR | High-temperature gas-cooled reactors |
| HVO | Hydrotreated Vegetable Oil |
| IMO | International Maritime Organization |
| IGF (Code) |
International Code of Safety for Ships using Gases or other Low-flashpoint Fuels Code |
| LCA | Life-Cycle Assessment |
| LBM | Liquefied Bio-Methane |
| LMCR | Liquid metal cooled reactors |
| LNG | Liquefied Natural Gas |
| KPIs | Key Performance Indicators |
| PWR | Pressurized-water reactor |
| SMART | Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Relevant, and Time (framework) |
| TOPSIS | Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution |
| TRL | Technological Readiness Levels |
| WAPS | Wind-assisted Propulsion Systems |
| ZNZ | Zero Near-Zero |
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