By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
OOLP Maritime World NewsOOLP Maritime World News
  • Home
  • Maritime News
    • Top stories
    • Global Maritime
    • International Shipping
    • Cruise
    • Ports
    • Security & Piracy
  • Live Marine Traffic
  • Events
  • Company
    • About OOLP
    • Contact us
  • Blog
Reading: Iron ore green corridor created linking Australia with East Asia
Share
Notification Show More
Latest News
MOL Selected for ‘Nadeshiko Brand’ for 3rd Consecutive Year, Reflecting Measures to Encourage Women’s Workplace Success
Shipping news
Port Arthur LNG project set to proceed
Global Maritime News
China’s major port sees no slump in cargo throughput
Port news
Procureship partners with Oriani to further strengthen digitalisation efforts of Greek shipping companies
Shipping news
Carbon Capture Study on MR Tanker Gets Go-Ahead from ABS
Global Maritime News
Aa
OOLP Maritime World NewsOOLP Maritime World News
Aa
Search
  • Home
  • Maritime News
    • Top stories
    • Global Maritime
    • International Shipping
    • Cruise
    • Ports
    • Security & Piracy
  • Live Marine Traffic
  • Events
  • Company
    • About OOLP
    • Contact us
  • Blog
Follow US
© 2022 - All Rights Reserved. OOLP News.
OOLP Maritime World News > Global Maritime News > Iron ore green corridor created linking Australia with East Asia
Global Maritime News

Iron ore green corridor created linking Australia with East Asia

Last updated: 2022/04/06 at 4:38 AM
20 Views
Share
3 Min Read
SHARE

A consortium led by the Global Maritime Forum and consisting of mining giants BHP and Rio Tinto, as well as German and Greek dry bulk owners Oldendorff Carriers and Star Bulk Carriers, has inked a letter of intent to assess the development of an iron ore green corridor between Australia and East Asia.

Green corridors are described as specific shipping routes where the economics, infrastructure, and logistics of zero-or near-zero-emission shipping are more feasible and rapid deployment can be supported by targeted policy and industry action.

A report by the Getting to Zero Coalition, a partnership between the Global Maritime Forum, Friends of Ocean Action and World Economic Forum, demonstrated how green corridors can be conceived, prioritised, and designed with a pre-feasibility study for an iron ore route between Australia and East Asia. The study suggested that green ammonia is the likely fuel choice for this corridor based on favorable production conditions, an enabling regulatory environment and willing stakeholders.

Taking the study further, the parties in the consortium intend to jointly assess green ammonia supply, bunkering, and first-mover support mechanisms necessary for their participation in a viable Australia-to-East Asia iron ore green corridor. Through the work in the consortium and with inputs from the wider supply chain, the partners said they would aim to develop a framework as a preparatory step toward real-world implementation of a green iron ore shipping value chain.

“Zero-greenhouse gas emission pathways require the creation of a parallel value chain that involves new ways of working, new contractual relationships, and drives the development of decarbonised fuel production and infrastructure. This new iron ore green corridor collaboration is an important step towards enabling zero greenhouse gas emission shipping from both the supply and demand side,” said Johannah Christensen, CEO at the Global Maritime Forum.

- Advertisement -

During COP26 last November top shipping nations such as the US, Japan, Germany, Norway, the Netherlands, the UK and Australia – joined the first-ever framework to create zero-emission ocean shipping corridors, the Clydebank Declaration for clean shipping corridors. Meanwhile, others have joined, with Singapore, one of the world’s most important transshipment hubs, most recently announcing its intention to become the 23rd signatory to the green shipping pact.

In January, Splash reported on how two of the most important port pairings in global container shipping are creating a green corridor. The ports of Los Angeles and Shanghai have committed to creating a green shipping corridor on one of the world’s busiest container shipping routes.

You Might Also Like

Port Arthur LNG project set to proceed

Carbon Capture Study on MR Tanker Gets Go-Ahead from ABS

Port of Montreal receives funding for expansion project in Contrecoeur

Fire at Chemical Plant Briefly Shuts Houston Ship Channel

admin April 6, 2022
Share this Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Copy Link Print
Previous Article TECO2030 and Narvik Hydrogen to Develop a Hydrogen Value Chain
Next Article European Commission Plans a Limited Port Ban on Russian Shipping
- Advertisement -

Latest News

MOL Selected for ‘Nadeshiko Brand’ for 3rd Consecutive Year, Reflecting Measures to Encourage Women’s Workplace Success
Shipping news March 23, 2023
Port Arthur LNG project set to proceed
Global Maritime News March 23, 2023
China’s major port sees no slump in cargo throughput
Port news March 22, 2023
Procureship partners with Oriani to further strengthen digitalisation efforts of Greek shipping companies
Shipping news March 22, 2023

OOLP maritime news is a portal that gets latest updates and happenings from the maritime & cruise industry across the globe.

Top maritime stories

Global maritime news

International shipping news

Cruise news

Maritime ports

Security and piracy

About OOLP news

Contact us

Live maritime traffic

Events

Blog

Follow US

© 2022 - All Rights Reserved. OOLP News.

  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy

Removed from reading list

Undo
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?