The LNG (liquefied natural gas) tanker Flex Volunteer, sailing under the flag of the Marshall Islands, cruises near the Saint-Nazaire bridge over the Loire estuary, as it leaves the dock of the LNG Terminal of Montoir-de-Bretagne, near Saint-Nazaire, western France, on 12 April , 2022
The LNG (liquefied natural gas) tanker Flex Volunteer, sailing under the flag of the Marshall Islands, cruises near the Saint-Nazaire bridge over the Loire estuary, as it leaves the dock of the LNG Terminal of Montoir-de-Bretagne, near Saint-Nazaire, western France, on 12 April , 2022

LNG ships worse for climate: NGO

A environmental activist group said Wednesday that cargo ships burning liquefied natural gas (LNG) are actually worse for the climate due to methane emissions.

Cargo ships use a particularly dirty type of fuel but the shipping industry has sought to shift to cleaner-burning LNG.

However, Transport & Environment said that an investigation it mounted of LNG-powered ships in service found that they emit methane which is a much more potent greenhouse gas than carbon dioxide.

The names of these new LNG-powered ships “contain words like ‘eco’ and they are often painted green,” said Transport & Environment.

“But their green credentials end there.”

Using a thermal imaging camera, the group said it filmed the emissions of two LNG-powered ships in the port of Rotterdam last November.

It said a review of the images by an independent optical gas imaging consultancy found that “intense uncombusted hydrocarbon emissions were being released into the atmosphere”.

The owner of one of the ships reviewed, French shipping giant CMA CGM, said it had “already identified the issue of uncombusted methane... and is working with its motor manufacturer partners” to reduce the emissions.

A spokesman said reductions in methane emissions had already been achieved.

Shipping companies began shipping to LNG primarily due to reduce high sulphur emissions from marine fuel, he also noted, as the pollution is a source of tensions with authorities in some port cities.