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Black carbon measurement in the Artic – is there business potential? Final Report of the Work Package 3 in the Sea Effects Black Carbon Project

Olli-Pekka Brunila; Katariina Ala-Rämi; Esa Hämäläinen; Tommi Inkinen

Black carbon measurement in the Artic – is there business potential? Final Report of the Work Package 3 in the Sea Effects Black Carbon Project

Olli-Pekka Brunila
Katariina Ala-Rämi
Esa Hämäläinen
Tommi Inkinen
Katso/Avaa
BC_loppuraportti_A73_published.pdf (1.207Mb)
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Turun yliopisto
URI
http://mkkdok.utu.fi/pub/A73-black_carbon_measurement.pdf
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Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on:
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2021042717248
Tiivistelmä



Maritime transport is vital for global business but vulnerable in terms
of competitiveness and environmental issues, especially in the Arctic regions.
Global warming is proceeding twice as fast in the Polar Regions as in other
parts of the world, resulting in a reduction of ice. Therefore, the Arctic sea
route is more navigable, allowing an increasing number of ships in the route.
Different diesel fuels and BC have a direct impact on climate change and the
lowering of arctic ice coverage. In this study, we explore whether measuring
black carbon (BC) opens up new business opportunities and designs for an
integrated solution.



Fossil fuels are mainly used in sea transport, and emissions such as CO2,
SO2, PM, NOx and BC originate mostly from vessel
combustion engines. BC is the most important factor in climate change after CO2,
and even though its share of international maritime transport is relatively
small in terms of total BC emissions (estimations vary between 1 and 2%), the
Arctic regions are sensitive to a climate forcer such as BC. If transport
continues to increase as estimated, concerns about BC emissions will grow.



The International Maritime Organization (IMO) is the main body
responsible for regulating international shipping emissions. The impact of BC
in the Arctic regions was first addressed a few years ago by IMO. There is
still only limited data available on BC emissions from ships and a limited
amount of relative BC mass measurements before and after exhaust treatments.
The majority of the previous BC research focused on diesel engines used in road
transport.



There are different ways to mitigate BC emissions from ships. The
techniques focus on fuel efficiency, slow steaming, exhaust treatments, fuel
quality, alternative fuels and different exhaust treatments. The potential of
creating business opportunities among these techniques is difficult to estimate
before the corresponding regulations are implemented.

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