GERMANY'S Hapag-Lloyd and Seaspan Corporation of Hong Kong have entered into a partnership agreement to retrofit and convert five 10,100 TEU container ships powered by conventional MAN S90 engines to dual-fuel engines capable of operating on methanol.
Following the engine retrofit, estimated to costs about US$120 million, the vessels will continue to be on long-term charter from Seaspan to Hapag-Lloyd, according to AJOT.
Dr Maximilan Rothkopf, Hapag-Lloyd's COO, stated: 'The methanol retrofit project is a further step in our ambitious sustainability agenda, which aims to achieve the decarbonization of the entire fleet by 2045.
'By enabling these vessels to use green methanol as of 2026, we will meet our customers' growing demand for green transportation solutions.' Regarding the initiative, Dr Rothkopf also added: 'With Seaspan, we benefit from a valued partner with deep experience, a wide supplier network and scale.'
Torsten Holst Pedersen, COO of Seaspan, commented: 'Collaboration between strong and like-minded partners, Hapag-Lloyd and Seaspan, drives innovation. Retrofitting must be an integral part of the strategy if the container shipping industry wants to deliver on its decarbonization targets.'
The vessels scheduled for retrofits are the 'Seaspan Amazon', 'Seaspan Ganges', 'Seaspan Thames', 'Seaspan Yangtze' and 'Seaspan Zambezi' and the retrofit is expected to take approximately 80-90 days per vessel starting in the first quarter of 2026.
SeaNews Turkey
Following the engine retrofit, estimated to costs about US$120 million, the vessels will continue to be on long-term charter from Seaspan to Hapag-Lloyd, according to AJOT.
Dr Maximilan Rothkopf, Hapag-Lloyd's COO, stated: 'The methanol retrofit project is a further step in our ambitious sustainability agenda, which aims to achieve the decarbonization of the entire fleet by 2045.
'By enabling these vessels to use green methanol as of 2026, we will meet our customers' growing demand for green transportation solutions.' Regarding the initiative, Dr Rothkopf also added: 'With Seaspan, we benefit from a valued partner with deep experience, a wide supplier network and scale.'
Torsten Holst Pedersen, COO of Seaspan, commented: 'Collaboration between strong and like-minded partners, Hapag-Lloyd and Seaspan, drives innovation. Retrofitting must be an integral part of the strategy if the container shipping industry wants to deliver on its decarbonization targets.'
The vessels scheduled for retrofits are the 'Seaspan Amazon', 'Seaspan Ganges', 'Seaspan Thames', 'Seaspan Yangtze' and 'Seaspan Zambezi' and the retrofit is expected to take approximately 80-90 days per vessel starting in the first quarter of 2026.
SeaNews Turkey