Maersk Line Reports Two Sulfur Cap Breaches in 2017

Danish container shipping major Maersk Line said that two instances of non-compliance with the 0.1 pct cap on sulfur content in fuel were recorded in two separate emission control areas in 2017.

The company said that the two incidents were not made for the financial benefit and were a result of a human error.

In March 2017, a breach was determined on a Maersk Line vessel calling at Long Beach in California, with the sulfur content at nearly 0.2 pct in an area where the sulfur cap is 0.1 pct.

“The internal investigation confirmed that the vessel carried compliant fuel and that the contamination was due to a human error in the switchover procedure,” Maersk said in its Sustainability Report for 2017.

In July 2017, a Maersk Line vessel in the port of Antwerp, Belgium, was in breach of the area’s fuel sulfur limit of 0.1 pct.

“Our internal investigation found that the vessel’s low sulfur fuel tank had been contaminated due to human error in operating two butterfly valves between the ship’s high sulfur and low sulfur fuel tanks. The contamination raised the sulfur level in the low sulfur fuel tank to around 0.2 pct,” the company explained.

“We carried out a complete cleaning of the low-sulfur tanks and the onboard systems, have implemented specific procedures to avoid this kind of contamination on all relevant vessels.”

In 2017, A.P. Moller – Maersk decided not to pursue scrubbers, a technology designed to wash the sulfur out of exhaust fumes and discharge it into the sea, in order to meet the sulfur cap requirements in ECAs and the upcoming IMO sulfur cap coming into force in 2020.

Instead, the company opted to replace its bunker fuel with fuels with lower sulfur content.

World Maritime News Staff