Discharge from ships with so-called scrubbers cause great damage to the Baltic Sea. A new study from Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden, shows that these emissions caused pollution corresponding to socio-economic costs of more than EUR 680 million between 2014 and 2022. At the same time, the researchers note that the shipping companies' investments in the much-discussed technology, where exhaust gases are "washed" and discharged into the sea, have already been recouped for most of the ships. This means that the industry is now making billions of euros by running its ships on cheap heavy fuel oil instead of cleaner fuel.
“We see a clear conflict of interest, where private economic interests come at the expense of the marine environment in one of the world's most sensitive seas," says Chalmers doctoral student Anna Lunde Hermansson, who is one of the authors of the new study, published in Nature Sustainability.
The study has been prompted by the ongoing discussion on a potential ban of scrubber water discharge – where large volumes of polluted water is produced and discharged from the ships' exhaust gas cleaning systems. The issue is on the agenda at multiple levels within the International Maritime Organization (IMO) and is also being discussed at EU level as well as on national levels such as the Swedish Parliament, although a Swedish decision on a ban is yet to be made.
Anna Lunde Hermansson and Chalmers colleagues Erik Ytreberg and Ida-Maja Hassellöv have been researching the environmental impact of shipping for many years and are contributing with their expertise in both international and national contexts. In a previous study, for example, they have shown that more than 200 million cubic metres of environmentally hazardous scrubber water is discharged into the Baltic Sea annually and that scrubber discharge water accounts for up to 9 percent of the total emissions of certain carcinogenic polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons (PAHs) into the Baltic Sea.
Excluding oil spill costs
In the new study, the Chalmers researchers calculated both the external costs of scrubber water discharge, and the financial balance sheets of over 3,800 vessels that invested in the scrubber technology. As for the costs associated with the degradation of marine ecosystems, the study shows that between the years 2014 and 2022, scrubber water discharges have polluted at a cost of over EUR 680 million in the Baltic Sea area. The calculations are based on models for willingness to pay to avoid marine environmental degradation, but according to the researchers, the estimates should be regarded as an underestimate. For example, direct costs associated with heavy fuel oil spills from ships using scrubbers are not included. The multi-million euro sum that it costs to clean up oil after ships have grounded and leak oil, for example Marco Polo on the Swedish coast of Blekinge last autumn, are not included in the calculations.
“If the scrubbers had not existed, no ships today would have been allowed to run on this dirty residual fuel. That is why the scrubber issue is highly relevant to push the shipping industry towards less negative environmental impact," says Lunde Hermansson.
Restrictions in several countries
In terms of the shipowner perspective, the researchers calculated the costs of installing and maintaining the scrubber systems, as well as the monetary gain from running the scrubber-equipped vessels on the cheaper and dirtier heavy fuel oil instead of the more expensive low-sulphur fuel alternatives. According to the calculations, the majority of the shipping companies that invested in scrubbers have already reached break even, and the total surplus by the end of 2022 for all of the 3,800 vessels, was EUR 4.7 billion. The researchers also note that more than 95 percent of the most common scrubber system (so-called open loop) are repaid within five years.
“From the industry's point of view, it is often stressed that shipping companies have acted in good faith by investing in technology that would solve the problem of sulphur content in air emissions and that they should not be penalised. Our calculations show that most investments have already been recouped and that this is no longer a valid argument," says Lunde Hermansson.
Recently, Denmark has decided to ban the discharge of scrubber water into so-called territorial waters, within 12 nautical miles of the coast. A number of countries around the world, such as Germany, France, Portugal, Turkey and China, have also adopted national bans or restrictions.
In Sweden, there is currently no general ban, although some ports, such as the Port of Gothenburg, have banned the discharge of scrubber water in their area.
“We now hope that the issue will also be given priority in the Swedish Parliament. This is a low-hanging fruit where we can reduce our negative impact on the vital marine environment,” says Lunde Hermansson.
More about the research:
The article "Strong economic incentives of ship scrubbers promoting pollution" has been published in Nature Sustainability. The study was conducted by Anna Lunde Hermansson, Ida-Maja Hassellöv, Tiia Grönholm, Jukka-Pekka Jalkanen, Erik Fridell, Rasmus Parsmo, Jesper Hassellöv and Erik Ytreberg. The researchers are active at Chalmers University of Technology, the Finnish Meteorological Institute and IVL, the Swedish Environmental Research Institute.
The research was funded by the Swedish Agency for Marine and Water Management, the Swedish Transport Administration and the EU's Horizon 2020.
Read previous press releases:
Research reveals large emissions from ship scrubbers
Marine environment at risk due to ship-emissions
More about scrubbers:
A scrubber can be described as a cleaning system for the exhaust gases formed during the combustion of heavy fuel oil, which has been the most common marine fuel since the 1970s. Seawater is pumped up and sprayed over the exhaust gases, which means that the emissions of sulphur compounds do not reach the air. The vessels thus comply with the requirements introduced by the International Maritime Organization, IMO, in 2020. The problem is that the water absorbs both the sulphur from the exhaust gases, which leads to severe acidification, and pollutants such as heavy metals and toxic organic compounds. The polluted scrubber water is then often pumped directly into the sea.
Since the mid-2010s, the number of vessels equipped with scrubbers has increased. In a study conducted in 2018, there were 178 ships with scrubbers in the Baltic Sea – today, researchers expect at least four times that. Globally, there are about 5,000 vessels, which corresponds to around five per cent of the total global fleet. Since it is mainly ships with high fuel consumption that invest in scrubbers, this five percent accounts for 25 percent of the global demand for heavy fuel oil.
A number of countries in the world have restricted or banned the discharge of scrubber water. Read more about this in a report from the International Council on Clean Transportation: Global update on scrubber bans and restrictions - International Council on Clean Transportation (theicct.org)
If the scrubbers had not existed, no ships today would have been allowed to run on this dirty residual fuel. That is why the scrubber issue is highly relevant to push the shipping industry towards less negative environmental impact.