Expert Assessments of Maritime Shipping Decarbonization Pathways by 2030 and 2050

Abstract International shipping conveys over 80% of global trade by volume and emits an estimated 3% of the world's greenhouse gases (GHGs). There are many potential pathways and barriers to decarbonizing the diverse and fragmented international shipping sector, with numerous uncertainties. Her...

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Main Authors: Imranul I. Laskar, Hadi Dowlatabadi, Amanda Giang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2025-04-01
Series:Earth's Future
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1029/2024EF005255
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author Imranul I. Laskar
Hadi Dowlatabadi
Amanda Giang
author_facet Imranul I. Laskar
Hadi Dowlatabadi
Amanda Giang
author_sort Imranul I. Laskar
collection DOAJ
description Abstract International shipping conveys over 80% of global trade by volume and emits an estimated 3% of the world's greenhouse gases (GHGs). There are many potential pathways and barriers to decarbonizing the diverse and fragmented international shipping sector, with numerous uncertainties. Here, we employ expert elicitation, gathering perspectives from 149 world‐leading experts in maritime shipping and decarbonization, to characterize uncertainties in shipping decarbonization pathways. These experts predict a 30%–40% (25th–75th percentile range) carbon intensity reduction by 2030 compared to 2008, meeting the International Maritime Organization's (IMO) target. By 2050, they anticipate an approximate 40%–75% cut in GHG emissions, falling short of the IMO's 2050 net‐zero GHG goal. Responding experts see decarbonization occurring through three types of measures: operational, technological, and alternative energy sources. In the short‐term, decarbonization is predicted to be dominated by operational measures, while in the long‐term, it will be dominated by alternative energy, although there is no consensus on which fuels will dominate. Technological upgrades are expected to play crucial supporting roles. The experts believe that differences in business models and governance may lead to different decarbonization pathways by ship segment. The experts' qualitative responses highlight: alternative energy systems, ship fleet turnover, spillover effects from other sectors, reducing industry pessimism, and the supply chain as critical leverage points that can propel shipping toward sustainable decarbonization pathways. Navigating this transition demands support from key levers identified in this study: politics and policy, maritime governance, and contractual architecture.
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spelling doaj-art-47d13cfe995148a3a033485c851479512025-08-20T01:52:11ZengWileyEarth's Future2328-42772025-04-01134n/an/a10.1029/2024EF005255Expert Assessments of Maritime Shipping Decarbonization Pathways by 2030 and 2050Imranul I. Laskar0Hadi Dowlatabadi1Amanda Giang2Institute for Resources Environment and Sustainability University of British Columbia Vancouver BC CanadaInstitute for Resources Environment and Sustainability University of British Columbia Vancouver BC CanadaInstitute for Resources Environment and Sustainability University of British Columbia Vancouver BC CanadaAbstract International shipping conveys over 80% of global trade by volume and emits an estimated 3% of the world's greenhouse gases (GHGs). There are many potential pathways and barriers to decarbonizing the diverse and fragmented international shipping sector, with numerous uncertainties. Here, we employ expert elicitation, gathering perspectives from 149 world‐leading experts in maritime shipping and decarbonization, to characterize uncertainties in shipping decarbonization pathways. These experts predict a 30%–40% (25th–75th percentile range) carbon intensity reduction by 2030 compared to 2008, meeting the International Maritime Organization's (IMO) target. By 2050, they anticipate an approximate 40%–75% cut in GHG emissions, falling short of the IMO's 2050 net‐zero GHG goal. Responding experts see decarbonization occurring through three types of measures: operational, technological, and alternative energy sources. In the short‐term, decarbonization is predicted to be dominated by operational measures, while in the long‐term, it will be dominated by alternative energy, although there is no consensus on which fuels will dominate. Technological upgrades are expected to play crucial supporting roles. The experts believe that differences in business models and governance may lead to different decarbonization pathways by ship segment. The experts' qualitative responses highlight: alternative energy systems, ship fleet turnover, spillover effects from other sectors, reducing industry pessimism, and the supply chain as critical leverage points that can propel shipping toward sustainable decarbonization pathways. Navigating this transition demands support from key levers identified in this study: politics and policy, maritime governance, and contractual architecture.https://doi.org/10.1029/2024EF005255expert elicitationmaritime shippinggreenhouse gas emissionsclimate changealternative energy
spellingShingle Imranul I. Laskar
Hadi Dowlatabadi
Amanda Giang
Expert Assessments of Maritime Shipping Decarbonization Pathways by 2030 and 2050
Earth's Future
expert elicitation
maritime shipping
greenhouse gas emissions
climate change
alternative energy
title Expert Assessments of Maritime Shipping Decarbonization Pathways by 2030 and 2050
title_full Expert Assessments of Maritime Shipping Decarbonization Pathways by 2030 and 2050
title_fullStr Expert Assessments of Maritime Shipping Decarbonization Pathways by 2030 and 2050
title_full_unstemmed Expert Assessments of Maritime Shipping Decarbonization Pathways by 2030 and 2050
title_short Expert Assessments of Maritime Shipping Decarbonization Pathways by 2030 and 2050
title_sort expert assessments of maritime shipping decarbonization pathways by 2030 and 2050
topic expert elicitation
maritime shipping
greenhouse gas emissions
climate change
alternative energy
url https://doi.org/10.1029/2024EF005255
work_keys_str_mv AT imranulilaskar expertassessmentsofmaritimeshippingdecarbonizationpathwaysby2030and2050
AT hadidowlatabadi expertassessmentsofmaritimeshippingdecarbonizationpathwaysby2030and2050
AT amandagiang expertassessmentsofmaritimeshippingdecarbonizationpathwaysby2030and2050