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Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

How to save energy through both societal and individual actions.

Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby sparky » Mon 03 Aug 2020, 18:44:00

.
Yep , that's about the size of it
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby vtsnowedin » Mon 03 Aug 2020, 18:57:37

Well we will see if cargo ships exiting Rotterdam bound for China or Japan choose to turn right instead of left to save time and fuel. If some do and make money at it then it might become a trend but there would need to be several profitable voyages using the Northern route to convince those with experienced and reliable routes through the Suez canal to make the change. Of course China developing a fossil fuel delivery route totally outside of US jurisdiction is in their military best interest but there cost is much less of a factor.
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby Newfie » Mon 03 Aug 2020, 20:42:09

About shipping in general, not arctic.

With the slow economy many ships are layed up. And many are headed to the breakers. The latest is a 10 year old Panamax vessel. Still lots of life left but no market.

Maybe this should be in the stock market crash thread.

https://gcaptain.com/10-year-old-panama ... for-scrap/
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby sparky » Tue 04 Aug 2020, 19:29:49

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ship cargo got their index the "Baltic dry index" it's used to gage the state of the world trading

https://tradingeconomics.com/commodity/baltic
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby JuanP » Thu 19 Nov 2020, 02:01:32

"Northern Sea Route shipping rises as sea ice falls"
https://nsidc.org/arcticseaicenews/

"Commercial shipping along the Northern Sea Route of the Russian north coast is increasing. This includes complete transits from Europe to East Asia, local shipping within the Arctic Ocean, and deliveries of liquefied natural gas from gas fields in the Yamal Peninsula to ports in both Europe and East Asia. The years 2019 and 2020 saw significantly increased shipping activity compared with 2018. 2020 had slightly more shipping than 2019 when comparing August shipping from both years. The shipping traffic map shows the importance of passages just north of the Taymyr Peninsula and near the New Siberian Islands on either side of the Laptev Sea; these are generally the last areas to clear of ice, and only in the warmest years. However, in 2020, the Northern Sea Route was essentially ice free from mid-July through about October 25. Icebreaker and ice-hardened tankers made several voyages within the route as early as June."

"Russia's latest and most powerful nuclear icebreaker sets off on maiden Arctic voyage"
https://www.rt.com/business/506833-russ ... ge-arctic/
"The icebreaker’s first voyage will take three weeks, according to AtomFlot. After the completion of the voyage, ‘Arktika’ will return to Murmansk to replenish supplies, and will head back to the Northern Sea Route in late December. The nuclear-powered ship will conduct winter-spring navigation in the Arctic."
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby Subjectivist » Thu 19 Nov 2020, 11:59:17

I am actually surprised it doesn't set a new shipping record at least 2 out of 3 years given how much shorter the route "over the top" is compared to the Suez and Panama routes.
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby dissident » Fri 20 Nov 2020, 16:35:03

There would be more traffic if it wasn't for Washington's blackmail threats against international shipping companies with sanctions. Washington has been frothing at the mouth about "Russian militarization of the Arctic" when Russia has been deploying hardware and revitalizing old bases on its own freaking soil. Washington had big plans for sea based ABM deployment near Russia's Arctic waters as part of its dream of boost phase ICBM interception. That plan hasn't been working out so the big baby is screaming. Also Washington, can't let the shipping chokehold it has in Panama and Suez be undermined by an alternative route. If you think this is not true, then do some research on the Suez crisis.

So we have had all sorts MSM propaganda assault on Russia and "environmentalist" action in the form of concern for the "fragile ecosystem" in the Arctic as if that ever mattered before. There is pressure at the UN to "protect" the Arctic from ebil Rosshian dominated shipping. Russia has anticipated some of this BS and is building new freighters and LNG carriers to operate on natural gas. Another effort is to offer shipping services since not all countries can flip over to squeaky clean ship propulsion:

https://www.arctictoday.com/rosatom-loo ... g-service/

In case it is not clear, the so-called environmental action is pure political rubbish since cutting down on ship travel time directly reduces emissions of CO2 and sulphate aerosol. The USA is not pushing its proxies to "clean up" shipping through the Suez and Panama.
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby JuanP » Mon 23 Nov 2020, 21:07:58

The IMO will ban heavy fuel oil use in the Arctic
https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-Gene ... rctic.html

"The International Maritime Organization (IMO) approved on Friday a ban on the use of heavy fuel oil for ships in the Arctic, but environmental organizations slammed the new regulation as “riddled with loopholes” that would continue to exonerate some polluters well into the end of 2020s. The Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC) of the UN’s organization IMO moved to ban the use of heavy fuel oil (HFO) and its carriage for use by ships in Arctic waters after July 1, 2024.
The controversy in the new regulation arises from several provisions. One exempts ships with oil fuel tanks inside their double hull, while another gives countries in Arctic waters the right to issue waivers from the HFO ban for vessels flying their respective flags in the Arctic until July 1, 2029."

One can't help but wonder how much geopolitical issues are behind these decisions, and not just environmental ones. I am not disputing the possible environmental benefits, but a large number of environmental and human rights organizations have been corrupted and politicized in the last decades, and everything they say and do these days needs to be taken with a pinch of salt.
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby dissident » Tue 24 Nov 2020, 12:05:40

It is pure political theater. They want to ban "dirty" fuel on a short-cut route, but do precisely f*ck all on the existing, longer routes. Sulfate pollution in the Arctic is not special. Clearly CO2 emissions are not confined there either. This geopolitical poser "environmentalism" is not credible since it does not act to stop the pollution in all transport shipping.

Also, for all the phony bleeding hearts, any wreaks leaking oil or bilge oil dumping would affect Russia's coat foremost. Canada would simply not be affected and only the Bering Strait and western Alaska would have some risk. But Alaska is already exposed to Exxon Valdez type risk.
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby JuanP » Fri 27 Nov 2020, 12:10:39

"Russia working on massive oil project to boost country's position in Arctic"
https://www.rt.com/business/507986-russ ... ct-arctic/

"Rosneft’s CEO Igor Sechin, who has met with President Vladimir Putin this week, has pledged that Vostok Oil will deliver up to 30 million tons of oil via the Northern Sea Route by 2024.

In total, the project will ensure the production, transportation and transshipment of up to 50 million tons of oil per year at the initial stage, and up to 100 million tons when the second stage is completed, Sechin said."
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby vtsnowedin » Fri 27 Nov 2020, 15:19:32

JuanP wrote:"Russia working on massive oil project to boost country's position in Arctic"
https://www.rt.com/business/507986-russ ... ct-arctic/

"Rosneft’s CEO Igor Sechin, who has met with President Vladimir Putin this week, has pledged that Vostok Oil will deliver up to 30 million tons of oil via the Northern Sea Route by 2024.

In total, the project will ensure the production, transportation and transshipment of up to 50 million tons of oil per year at the initial stage, and up to 100 million tons when the second stage is completed, Sechin said."

That would be about 100 super tanker loads per year in 2024 and 300 per year at the completion. That seems doable but a bit ambitious as that would match half of what transits the Suez canal each year.
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby JuanP » Fri 27 Nov 2020, 17:14:43

"Russian oil giant announces start of vast Arctic project"
https://phys.org/news/2020-11-russian-o ... rctic.html

Another source on the news above.
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby JuanP » Tue 15 Dec 2020, 19:57:54

The Arctic Ocean is a Russian lake"
https://www.strategic-culture.org/news/ ... sian-lake/

"Most of the Arctic is frozen most of the time and icebreaker ships are necessary. According to this list of operational icebreakers, Canada has six, the USA four, Denmark three, Norway two. Russia has more than seventy. Russia’s fleet is modern, the others are old. Russia has the only nuclear-powered icebreakers – eight in service according to Wikipedia. The Arktika is the world’s largest and most powerful icebreaker capable of operating through three metres of ice; there are three more in the works. But an even larger class is coming: four metre ice; construction began in July. Russia’s icebreaker capacity is so enormous that one of them spends its time running tourist cruises to the North Pole. None of the other Arctic countries has anything like this. The USA is planning to build more to replace its elderly fleet; Canada is “exploring options“.

The principal reason for Russia’s construction of such powerful icebreakers as the Project 10510 (aka Leader or Лидер class) is to turn the “Northern Sea Route” into a year-round useable shipping route. The route runs from Murmansk (ice-free year-round and therefore accessible to world shipping) along the top of Russia, through the Bering Straits into the Pacific Ocean – a much shorter route than anything else. At present, its potential is offset by the facts that it has very thick ice at the eastern end and that current icebreakers move slowly at their icebreaking limits. The intention is that the Leader class icebreakers will be able to move through the heavy ice at normal ship speeds (about 12 knots). All this is explained in here by John Helmer."

More info and several related links at the article linked above.
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby REAL Green » Tue 15 Dec 2020, 20:08:20

“An oil spill in Russia’s Arctic exposes risks for Moscow’s Far North plans”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/climate- ... rc404=true

“Thawing permafrost in the rapidly warming region leaves Moscow’s ambitious Arctic expansion proposals literally on shaky ground…The smell of diesel was so overpowering that it made Vasily Ryabinin dizzy. That meant he was getting close. As an inspector from Russia’s environmental agency, Ryabinin went on his own to the Daldykan River in the Siberian city of Norilsk to see firsthand the aftermath of a major fuel leak at a metals plant. He was also getting a glimpse of something else: possible warning signs for Russia’s plans to aggressively expand its industrial and military footholds across the country’s resource-rich Arctic — one of the world’s fastest-warming regions. This surge in climate change in interior Russia — more than three times the global average — is throwing new risks in the way of President Vladimir Putin’s Far North agenda, among his top domestic initiatives. A key danger is piling more infrastructure atop rapidly thawing permafrost, land that remains frozen year after year.”
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby Subjectivist » Wed 30 Dec 2020, 17:34:12

More than 32 million tons of goods has been shipped on the Russian Arctic shipping route in 2020.

As Russia’s vast Arctic waters freeze and ships flee the region, nuclear power company Rosatom makes public its latest Arctic shipping data.

Despite the COVID-19 and global economic downturn, shipping in the region continues to grow. According to Rosatom, the Russian state nuclear power company, the 32 million tons landmark was crossed on Dec. 22.

However, only a minor share of the volumes have been shipped along the eastern part of the route. The overwhelming part has been shipped on the western part, and first of all to the LNG terminal of Sabetta, oil terminal of Kamenny, as well as the Utrenneye construction project in Gydan Peninsula.

Symptomatically, as the new data was presented on Dec. 22, there was not a single ship sailing in the waters between the mouth of great river Yenisey and the Bering Strait, a several thousand kilometer distance.

According to Leonid Irlitsa, Deputy Head of Rosatom’s Northern Sea Route Directorate, the original target for the year was 29 million tons. A key event this year has been the opening of a new system for automatic management of maritime operations, Irlitsa explains.

The system will allow for a significant growth in transit shipments on the route in 2021, Rosatom argues.

Shipping on the Northern Sea Route has grown extensively over several years. In 2017, a total of 10,7 million tons were transported on the route. In 2018, the volume increased to 20,18 million tons and in 2019 to 31,5 million.

There is still a long way to go before President Putin’s target for Arctic shipping is reached. In his so-called May Decrees from 2018, Putin requests a total of 80 million tons on the route in 2024.


https://www.rcinet.ca/eye-on-the-arctic ... ks-record/

LONDON — Ships sailing through the Arctic region’s busiest lane along the Siberian coast made the highest number of trips on record this year as a quicker-than-expected melting of ice enabled more traffic, data showed.

The Arctic has warmed at least twice as quickly as the rest of the world over the last three decades and shipping activity has picked up.

Analysis by the Center for High North Logistics at Norway’s Nord University Business School showed there were 62 transits through the Northern Sea Route in the period to Dec. 9, versus 37 for the whole of 2019.

A previous year, 2013, is frequently cited as having a record 71 transits of the Northern Sea Route. But that data used a different definition, CHNL said, and included 31 voyages that did not cross the entire route from Novaya Zemlya to the Bering Strait.

“This year is considered to be the highest number of the full transit voyages,” Sergey Balmasov with CHNL told Reuters.

“We see favorable ice conditions in this navigation season as one of the reasons for the growth.”

The number of ships using the route rose to 331 vessels in the year to date, versus 277 for the whole of 2019, CHNL data showed.

The trade is driven by commodities producers — mainly in Russia, China and Canada — sending iron ore, oil, liquefied natural gas and other fuels through Arctic waters.

[IMO, Arctic states face criticism over a weak HFO ban]

The United Nations shipping agency last month approved a ban on the use of heavy fuel oil in the Arctic, but the move was criticized by green groups which said loopholes would allow many vessels to keep sailing without enough regulatory control over the region’s fragile ecosystem.

Environmentalists say HFO produces higher emissions of harmful pollutants, including sulphur oxide, nitrogen oxides, and black carbon.

“The region has seen comparatively little shipping traffic compared to other regions of the world, and the necessary environmental regulation to minimise the impact of increased shipping in the region is incomplete,” said Sian Prior, lead advisor at the Clean Arctic Alliance.

“Increased shipping will increase the risk of oil spills in the Arctic, but the remoteness and lack of infrastructure will make responding to an oil spill very challenging, if possible at all.”

CLARIFICATION: This story has been updated to clarify that 2020 saw a record number of full transits of the Northern Sea Route, with a higher figure often cited for 2013 using a different definition.


https://www.arctictoday.com/the-norther ... t-in-2020/
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby dissident » Wed 30 Dec 2020, 19:38:56

Fear mongering BS from 3rd parties with no stake in the Arctic Ocean. And "HFO" is not the only fuel option, so yet more BS.

https://www.maritime-executive.com/arti ... a-shipyard

Note the LNG fuel tanks. The new generation of ships used in the Arctic will use LNG for fuel and not "HFO". The above is an example of a new ship for use outside the Arctic Ocean. It is actually one of the world's first LNG fueled supertankers. So these enviro-phonies with politically motivated platforms should sod off.

Since oil will not be a primary product shipped through the north sea route, but goods from China and South East Asia, the only oil spills that these professional stooges can possibly be whinging about is fuel oil or "HFO". But they are also a propaganda front against Russian Arctic development projects inside Russian territory. For example, the Vostok oil development project that will create 130,000 jobs which the UK Times newspaper was bitching about invoking all sorts of irrelevant BS like nuclear weapons.

If these clowns really care about oil spills, then they should ban all oil tanker traffic. Invoking the "argument" that the Arctic is special is BS. They don't own the Russian Arctic coast where basically all of any NSR oil spills will end up. Don't worry your sanctimonious hypocrite heads about Russia's problems.
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby JuanP » Wed 30 Dec 2020, 23:50:29

One can only imagine how terribly concerned the USA, UK, etc. must be about Russia's environment and the wellbeing of the Russian people. We all know that they are always helping Russia in every way they possibly can and doing everything in their power to assist Russians in their development.
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby REAL Green » Thu 31 Dec 2020, 07:36:07

“Sea-level rise from climate change could exceed the high-end projections, scientists warn”
https://www.fasterthanexpected.com/2020 ... ists-warn/

“A big concern of Englander’s for our future is the non-linear behavior of sea-level rise. In recent years the pace of sea-level rise has been accelerating. In the 1990s the oceans rose at about 2 millimeters per year. From 2000 to 2015 the average was 3.2 millimeters per year. But over the past few years the pace has quickened to 4.8 millimeters per year. At the current pace, we can expect at least 15 more inches of sea-level rise by the year 2100. But, as has been the case for the past few decades, the pace of sea-level rise is expected to continue to increase for the foreseeable future. So, 15 inches is not only a lower bound, it is also extremely unlikely. Adding confidence to the paper’s warning that IPCC projections for a strong warming scenario may be too low, is the evidence that sea-level rise has been running on the high end of IPCC projections for decades. Historically speaking, simple math reveals that for every degree Fahrenheit the Earth warms, sea-level eventually rises by an astonishing 24 feet. Considering that Earth has already warmed 2 degrees Fahrenheit since the late 1800s, we know that substantial sea-level rise is already baked in, regardless of whether we stop global warming. Scientists just don’t know exactly how long it will take to see the rise or how fast it will occur. But using proxy records, glaciologists can see that as we emerged from the last Ice Age, sea level rose at remarkable rates — as fast as 15 feet per century at times.”
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby Subjectivist » Fri 01 Jan 2021, 21:45:23

REAL Green wrote:“Sea-level rise from climate change could exceed the high-end projections, scientists warn”
https://www.fasterthanexpected.com/2020 ... ists-warn/

“A big concern of Englander’s for our future is the non-linear behavior of sea-level rise. In recent years the pace of sea-level rise has been accelerating. In the 1990s the oceans rose at about 2 millimeters per year. From 2000 to 2015 the average was 3.2 millimeters per year. But over the past few years the pace has quickened to 4.8 millimeters per year. At the current pace, we can expect at least 15 more inches of sea-level rise by the year 2100. But, as has been the case for the past few decades, the pace of sea-level rise is expected to continue to increase for the foreseeable future. So, 15 inches is not only a lower bound, it is also extremely unlikely. Adding confidence to the paper’s warning that IPCC projections for a strong warming scenario may be too low, is the evidence that sea-level rise has been running on the high end of IPCC projections for decades. Historically speaking, simple math reveals that for every degree Fahrenheit the Earth warms, sea-level eventually rises by an astonishing 24 feet. Considering that Earth has already warmed 2 degrees Fahrenheit since the late 1800s, we know that substantial sea-level rise is already baked in, regardless of whether we stop global warming. Scientists just don’t know exactly how long it will take to see the rise or how fast it will occur. But using proxy records, glaciologists can see that as we emerged from the last Ice Age, sea level rose at remarkable rates — as fast as 15 feet per century at times.”


Historically the deglaciation at the end of the last ice age added in the meltwater pulse periods between 55mm-61mm a year for 400-500 years before returning to a base rate around 2mm/year. In American terms that is 2.2-2.5 inches a year at the very worst rates of rise.

That doesn't sound like a heck of a lot but when it goes on year in and year out it really adds up accumulating up to 80 feet in each major melting event spread over several centuries.

I wouldn't be too surprised if we trip a climate tipping point and melt rates rise so we are getting 50-60mm of sea level rise a year. However even if that did happen a old timer using a walker could still very easily outrun sea level rise. At a few inches a year sure, lots of total land around the world coastline will be lost, but it won't be a great loss in any one location on any given year. Losing a 3 inch width of beach around all the continents adds up to hundreds of square miles/kilometers but for Joe beach house owner it just means the next storm surge will be a few inches higher, not that he has to abandon his beach house this year vs 5 or 10 years down the line. And as dear Joe has to give up his beach house the people owning the strip of land just up slope from him will become beachfront property owners in their turn for a few years or maybe more than a decade depending on rates and extent of the rise.

If that claim that the already baked in 2F temperature increase means a 48 foot total sea level rise over the next few centuries well most of the Meltwater Pulse reconstruction from paleoclimate studies say these events take 400-500 years to run their course. I personally hope to make it to say 85-90 years old so even if this started the day i was born I would only have seen 10-12 feet of the rise by the time old age catches up with me.

Sure a complete global melt down would add 220-240 feet to mean sea level, but here in Toledo I am already at 580 feet so even if it all melted overnight it wouldn't directly impact me, it would be the displaced residents that would upset my applecart so to speak. IIRC Memphis, TN is around 230 feet so maybe if you are a big believer in instant sea level rise you should invest in future beach front around there.
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Re: Arctic shipping to conserve energy.

Unread postby JuanP » Mon 18 Jan 2021, 12:14:54

"Russia plans earliest ever shipping of Arctic LNG to Asia""
https://www.rt.com/business/512851-russ ... ment-asia/

"Russian gas producer Novatek plans to send cargo from its Yamal LNG facility to Asian markets via the Northern Sea Route (NSR) in early May with the help of an ice-breaker, sources told Bloomberg.

The cargo would become the earliest-ever shipment of liquefied natural gas to Asia, beating last year’s record by almost two weeks and paving the way for a record navigation season this year."

"Novatek sent an eastbound LNG cargo via the NSR with ice-breaker support in late May in 2020, which was the earliest start to the navigation season in the area to date. Shipments continued to Asia through January, making it a record long navigation season in the eastern Arctic.

Earlier this month, Novatek sent two LNG tankers (‘Christophe de Margerie’ and ‘Nikolay Yevgenov’) to China through the NSR. Industry officials said that the vessels don’t need ice-breaker support as the current conditions in the eastern Arctic are mild. Nevertheless, the tankers will use an ice-breaker on their return to Russia across the passage in February.

According to Sovcomflot, which owns the ‘Christophe de Margerie’, a cargo ship has never made a February voyage in the eastern Arctic. The planned February return voyage is part of “the systemic efforts to gradually extend transit navigation in the eastern sector of the Arctic,” said Sekretarev, adding: “In the future, the goal is to set up safe year-round navigation” across the Northern Route.

Russia wants to turn the NSR into a major trade artery between Europe and Asia. Last year, 33 million tons of freight were transported using the Arctic route."

So, the Northern Sea Route is now open to commercial shipping from May to February. I wonder how long it will take before it is open year round.
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