Asia Pacific illuminating cross-sector e-fuel pathways to advance maritime decarbonisation

Accelleron, a global technology leader in turbocharging, fuel injection, and digital solutions in the marine and energy industries, has released its second report in its ‘Accelerating to Net Zero’ series, highlighting the Asia Pacific market's critical role as the proving ground for much-needed e-fuel networks.



“The ships are ready. The net-zero technology is ready. The fuels are still missing,” said Daniel Bischofberger, Chief Executive Officer at Accelleron. “Our customers are preparing ships to run on e-ammonia and e-methanol, and there is broad agreement that green hydrogen-based e-fuels will be essential for reaching net-zero. Even with delays to global net-zero regulation, progress is visible. We wrote this report to bring clarity to that progress and support the industry with evidence it can use. Developments in Asia Pacific show green hydrogen and e-fuel infrastructure beginning to take shape in ways that could inform similar efforts in other regions.”



With the economic scale and distinctive political environment to support early progress in green hydrogen and e-fuel development, the Asia Pacific region has emerged as an advanced testbed for these systems.



Key findings from the report reveal that while the recent postponement of the IMO’s Net-Zero Framework has caused uncertainty within the shipping industry, the drive for maritime decarbonisation across the region continues at pace.



A driving force behind this progress is Asia Pacific’s view of green hydrogen and e-fuels as a pillar of both decarbonisation and long-term, cross-sector energy security. In addition, the region boasts some of the world’s most extensive renewable energy and industrial resources to stimulate green hydrogen and e-fuel production. Several countries are already developing “book and claim” systems to overcome early gaps in e-fuel distribution infrastructure, while smaller-scale, modular e-fuel production models are emerging that enable incremental buildout and directly accelerate early supply. Targeted government supply-side incentives support that acceleration by reducing costs across the e-fuel value chain.



These conditions create a strong cross-sector foundation for e-fuel production, matched by a natural upstream/downstream supply/demand dynamic for e-fuels that is unparalleled in other regions around the world. Asia Pacific is actively demonstrating how the critical elements of a future e-fuel system can operate together and across sector boundaries, linking ports, industrial clusters and bunkering infrastructure.



-Qingzhou Wang, Chairman of Accelleron China, concluded: “Our first Accelerating to Net Zero report highlighted the central role that green hydrogen–based e-fuels will play in shipping’s energy transition. This new report shows how that transition is beginning to take shape on the ground. Across Asia Pacific, different approaches to early e-fuel development are emerging, offering evidence of how e-fuel networks can develop in practice and laying the foundations for future scale-up."

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