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Scrubbers

North P&I Club: No Scrubs- countries & ports with restrictions on EGCS discharges

Attached table outlines North’s updated insight on the stands taken by ports that have or will prohibit the use of scrubbers, or have placed conditions on their use.

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The North P&I Club on Thursday (15 April) published an update on the stands taken by international ports on the use of scrubbers and the allowance of EGCS discharge. Based on the earlier published chart, the following are countries that have been added to the list: 

Exhaust gas cleaning systems (EGCS) – more commonly referred to as scrubbers – are an accepted equivalent measure in complying with the IMO 2020 global sulphur cap. The use of scrubbers has split the shipping industry. Ports around the world are looking at the impact of scrubber use in their waters.

A number of ports and regions have already stated that they will not allow the discharge of washwater from scrubbers. 

The table below summarises North’s understanding of the positions taken by ports that have or will prohibit the use of scrubbers, or have placed conditions on their use.

This information is to the best of our knowledge and is for guidance only. For up to date and definitive information, contact the local authorities or agents. 

Country Port Open loop EGCS discharge allowed? Comments
Belize All No The Clean Shipping Alliance advise:

 Discharge of Exhaust Gas Cleaning Wash Water prohibited in territorial waters and port areas (Marine Circular 01/2018 – BPA/MS/23-1/2018(98) dated 12/12/2018)

Cyprus All Yes – Conditional The Clean Shipping Alliance advise:

In accordance with  CPA Regulations of CA 373/2016 Part II – Cyprus Port Authority, ships requiring to use ECGS at Cyprus’ ports or anchorage area must submit a written request for assessment and approval by the CPA at least 48 hours prior to the arrival of the ship. The written request shall provide the following detailed information:

·   the location that EGCS will be used (port, anchor); and

·   the type of EGCS.

Finland Port of Porvoo No The Clean Shipping Alliance advise:

·   Open loop discharge not permitted in harbour area of port of Porvoo

·   Ministry of Transport and Communications informs: Under Finnish legislation, the discharge of wash waters from open-loop scrubbers is allowed in Finnish ports and territorial waters. However, some ports have restricted the discharge in the port area under their own competence.

France Ports of Cannes, Marseille, Nantes-St Nazaire, La

Rochelle,

 

Rouen, Bordeaux and Le Havre

 

No Direction des Affaires Maritimes issued document on 4 March 2020: Projet de modification de la division 213 – Prevention de la pollution – Interdiction de rejet des epurateurs de fumees en systeme ouvert dans Tenceinte des ports frangais et au mouillage

It states that in France, some large seaports such as Marseille, Nantes-St Nazaire and La Rochelle have already amended their port regulations to include a ban on

open-loop scrubber discharges, and the port of Rouen is preparing to do the same. Other ports such as Bordeaux and Le Havre have a prohibition in principle.

The Clean Shipping Alliance advise:

In Cannes, as per the Cannes Bay Sustainability Charter, the restriction applies to the cruise ships only.

Ghana All No The Clean Shipping Alliance advise:

Ghana Maritime Authority informed the CSA that the Administration does not allow the operation of open-loop scrubbers in Ghanaian waters

Kenya All No The Clean Shipping Alliance advise:

Kenya’s National Guidelines for Implementation of IMO 2020 December 2019 include:

7.1. The  discharge  of  wash-water  from  open-loop  scrubbers  is prohibited in  the Kenyan Ports limits. This is to maintain the standard of Kenya marine water quality.

7.2 While in the port of Mombasa, ships fitted with hybrid type of scrubbers shall switch to  the  closed-loop  mode  of  operation.  Ships  fitted  with  open-loop  scrubbers  shall switch over to compliant fuel oil.

Mauritius All No The Clean Shipping Alliance advise:

Merchant Shipping Notice 2 of 2019 includes:

3.9 …except in the case of innocent passage, ships proceeding to Mauritius or other islands forming part of  the territory of  Mauritius that use high sulphur fuel oil (HSFO) in combination with open-loop scrubber shall changeover from HSFO to compliant fuel oil whenever they enter the territorial waters of Mauritius i.e. within 12 nms from the shore.

 Environmental legislation presently in force in Mauritius prohibits the discharge of wash water from open-loop scrubber.

Pakistan Port of Karachi and Port Bin Qasim No The Government of Pakistan Ministry of Maritime Affairs (Ports and Shipping) Circular 001/2020 prohibits the discharge of wash-water from open loop scrubbers. If closed loop scrubbers are not in use then compliant fuel should be used and changed over before arriving in port waters.
Qatar Qatar Petroleum MIC (Mesaieed Industrial City) No The Clean Shipping Alliance advise:

Qatar Petroleum MIC [Mesaieed Industrial City] Port Information and Regulations Guide – January 2020 states:

“Also, as per Qatari Environmental Law, wash water originated from the open loop scrubbers, containing chemicals and /or metals are PROHIBITED to be discharged in Qatari waters.”

Saudi Arabia All Ports No Saudi Port Authorities have now banned exhaust wash water discharges from open loop EGCS systems in Saudi ports until an environmental standard is issued in this regard.
Turkey All No Vitsan Mümessillik ve Müşavirlik A.Ş advise that the Ministry of Environment and Urbanization of Turkey announced on 6 April 2021 that washwater discharge of open-loop scrubbers is prohibited in Turkish waters. Vessels operating with open-loop scrubber must switch sulphur-compliant fuels when entering / sailing in Turkish waters.  Turkish authorities may impose a pollution fine on vessels that do not comply with the regulation.

Vitsan circular regarding the scrubber usage in Turkey can be read here.

The Turkish Chamber of Shipping Circular on the subject can be read here.

United Kingdom – Scotland Forth and Tay ports No Forth Ports Circular No 45 of 2019 states: “Forth Ports and Port of Dundee Byelaw 59 specifically prohibits the discharge of materials into the Forth and Tay. This applies to discharge water from an “Open Loop” scrubber. Therefore, as a precaution the use of “Open Loop” scrubbers on the Forth and Tay is prohibited until further notice.”

See:  https://www.forthports.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Notice-to-Mariners-No-45-of-2019-Use-of-Scubbers.pdf

United States Port of Seattle No The Clean Shipping Alliance advise:

Port of Seattle Terminals Tariff No. 5, Item 4001 states that passenger cruise ships will not discharge graywater, blackwater, or exhaust gas cleaning system wash water, whether treated or not while at berth in Port Terminals.

United Arab Emirates Dubai No The Clean Shipping Alliance advise:

Guidelines for Vessels Calling to Dubai Territorial Waters states that the use of EGCS is prohibited within Dubai territorial waters.


A full copy of the chart can be accessed
here.

Related: North P&I Club: No Scrubs: More ports declare ban on EGCS discharges *Update*
Related: North P&I Club: No Scrubs: More ports declare ban on EGCS discharges *Update*


Photo credit: Manifold Times (Scrubber)
Published: 16 April, 2021

 

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ECA

VPS examines North-East Atlantic ECA on current bunker fuel mix and testing

Impact of this new ECA, will not only affect bunker fuel selection and testing, but it will also require a review of, voyage planning, bunker procurement and scrubber strategy, amongst others.

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Steve Bee, Group Marketing and Strategic Projects Director, and Emilian Buksak, Decarbonisation Advisor of marine fuels testing company VPS, on Wednesday (8 April) highlighted MEPC 84 approved a new emission control area (ECA) covering the North-East Atlantic Ocean, with agreements reached on adopted amendments to MARPOL Annex VI. 

The new ECA, which will become the world’s largest emission control area, will be implemented on 1st September 2027

In a recent article, VPS outlined how VPS testing, data, CEM systems and advisory services can support vessels in both their operational and compliance challenges associated with this new ECA:

The recent International Maritime Organisation’s (IMO), Maritime Environmental Protection Committee (MEPC) meeting in London, had its main focus on setting binding greenhouse gas emission reduction targets for the global shipping sector. In keeping with the Committee’s continuing drive to decarbonise shipping and reduce the pollutant emissions from the global fleet, one major outcome from the MEPC-84 meeting was the approval of a new emission control area (ECA) covering the North East Atlantic Ocean, with agreements reached on adopted amendments to MARPOL Annex VI.

This new ECA, which will become the world’s largest emission control area, will be implemented on 1st September 2027, with the ECA requirements taking effect on 1st September 2028. It will cover the territorial seas and exclusive economic zones of Greenland, Iceland, the Faroe Islands, Ireland, the United Kingdom, France, Spain and Portugal, extending up to 200 nautical miles from their baselines:

VPS examines North-East Atlantic ECA impact on current bunker fuel mix and testing

A key advantage of the new NE Atlantic ECA is that it will close the gap between the existing ECAs in the North and Baltic Sea, plus the Mediterranean, creating an almost continuous zone of reduced shipping emissions. It will also connect to the newly approved ECAs in the Canadian Arctic and Norwegian Sea, which are scheduled for implementation in 2026 and 2027 respectively. Together these ECAs will cover almost half of all Arctic coastal waters, improving air quality, by reducing SOx, NOx and Particulate Matter (PM), protecting  public health, and reducing the environmental impacts from shipping.

The sulphur limit for the marine fuels allowed to be burnt within this new ECA will reduce from the current 0.50% to 0.10%. This will force vessels to use either effective abatement technology (scrubbers), or alternatively burn marine distillates, ultra-low-sulphur fuels (ULSFOs), or biofuels with a sulphur content of less than 0.10%.

Without doubt this new ECA will cause a significant change to the current fuel mix, probably on an even greater scale than was witnessed with the introduction of the Mediterranean ECA back in May 2025.  The fuel mix in the Mediterranean Pre-ECA implementation was,  53% VLSFO, 28% HSFO, 16% MGO, 2% ULSFO and 1% Biofuels. But from the 1st May 2025, the fuel mix changed to, 30% VLSFO, 29% HSFO, 30% MGO, 8% ULSFO and 4% Biofuels.  

So, in terms of actual tonnage, the Mediterranean ECA witnessed a decrease in VLSFOs by 23%, whilst MGO usage increased by 107%. At the same time, ULSFO and biofuels supply increased 4-fold.

Regarding fuel quality within the Mediterranean post-ECA implementation, MGO off-specification rates increased to 4%. However, the most worrying off-specification rates were for ULSFOs which saw a 10-times increase from 2% to 20% from the start of the ECA, with the main off-specification parameters being pour point, sulphur, TSP, CCAI, water and viscosity.

Therefore, it is fair to assume we’ll witness a similar dramatic fuel mix change upon the implementation of the NE Atlantic ECA, with possibly similar fuel off-specification issues, highlighting the continuing need for proactive fuel testing to protect vessels, crew and the environment.

Whilst the focus on fuel quality is essential, the multi-pollutant nature of this new ECA, covering SOx, PM and NOx, also brings the role of continuous emissions monitoring increasingly to the fore. Therefore, a further consideration relating to the impact of this new ECA relates to vessel newbuilds and the stricter NOx Tier III requirements. For newbuilds subject to the stricter NOx Tier III requirements, compliance depends not only on engine certification at delivery, but on demonstrating that exhaust after-treatment systems, typically Selective Catalytic Reduction (SCR) or Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR), continue to perform as designed throughout the service life of the vessel.

For scrubber-equipped ships, real-time SO₂ measurement provides the operational evidence of equivalency that Port State Control inspections increasingly expect to see. Plus, for vessels operating under multiple overlapping regulatory regimes, including the new NE Atlantic ECA, EU MRV, EU ETS and FuelEU Maritime, continuous emissions monitoring via the VPS EMSYS CEM system delivers a single, verified source of emissions data that can be applied across all of them.

As noted by DNV in their MEPC 84 technical and regulatory update, the newly adopted IMO measurement guidelines can also be used for determining actual methane and nitrous oxide under the EU ETS and FuelEU Maritime, confirming the direct route from IMO-recognised measurement to EU compliance reporting.

At an operational level, the new ECA will introduce considerable complexity in the way fuel consumption is attributed across voyage segments, with VLSFOs burnt outside the zone and compliant fuels inside, all of which carry implications for consumption reporting, charterparty allocation and EU MRV alignment. VPS Maress can provide the underlying fuel and energy data into one auditable platform, helping crews manage the operational complexity that the new ECA introduces, including voyage segmentation, fuel changeover and emissions accounting, plus providing the consolidated data foundation that feeds existing EU MRV and IMO DCS reporting obligations. 

VPS PortStats via the VPS Verisphere eco-system, (VeriSphere | VPS), further supports bunker procurement planning with port-by-port intelligence on compliant fuel availability and price spreads. Such intelligence and insights, will prove particularly valuable in the months immediately following 1st September 2028, when the supply pressure on 0.10% sulphur fuels is likely to peak.

Regarding the more strategic decisions ahead, including Tier III engine selection for newbuilds, retrofit feasibility for existing tonnage, and charterparty clauses allocating the ECA fuel cost premium between owners and charterers, VPS Advisory Services can provide the integrated commercial and technical perspective needed to navigate this transition with confidence.

Therefore, its clear the impact of this new ECA, will not only affect the choice of fuel to be burnt onboard and its subsequent quality testing, but it will also require a review of, voyage planning, bunker procurement, scrubber strategy, engine certification, compliance documentation and charterparty exposure.

Related: DNV on IMO MEPC 84: Revisiting Net‑Zero Framework

 

Photo credit: VPS
Published: 14 May, 2026

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Scrubbers

No open-loop EGCS with HSFO bunker fuel allowed in Saudi Arabian ports

Use of HSFO with an Open-Loop Exhaust Gas Cleaning System at 0.5% or 0.1% sulphur mode setting is prohibited until further notice for the ships entering Saudi Arabian ports, says GAC.

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Aramco: Ras Tanura Port, Eastern Province of Saudi Arabia, on the Arabian Gulf.

The use of High Sulphur Fuel Oil (HSFO) with an Open-Loop Exhaust Gas Cleaning System (EGCS) at 0.5% or 0.1% sulphur mode setting is prohibited until further notice for the ships entering Saudi Arabian ports, according to GAC Hot Port News on Wednesday (3 December). 

All ships entering Aramco ports shall comply with one of the following options:

  • Use compliant fuel oil (≤ 0.50% m/m Sulphur, or ≤ 0.10% when operating in ECAs, if applicable).
  • Operate the EGCS in Closed-Loop mode (or Hybrid system in Closed mode), with strict prohibition on the discharge of wash water into the sea.

 

Photo credit: Aramco
Published: 8 December, 2025

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Bunker Fuel

Equatorial navigates through sanctions and green transition amid shifting bunkering landscape

Shipowners’ demand for ‘cheapest compliant fuel’ suggests a potentially more competitive and shrinking market for LSFO, forecasts Choong Sheen Mao, COO at Equatorial.

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Equatorial navigates through sanctions and green transition amid shifting bunkering landscape

Singapore-based physical bunker supplier Equatorial Marine Fuel Management Services Pte Ltd (Equatorial) is adapting to a dynamic global bunker market shaped by regulatory shifts, geopolitical tensions, and the push for decarbonisation, states its Chief Operating Officer.

Choong Sheen Mao was amongst panellists of the Bunker Sellers Panel at IBIA Annual Convention 2025 in Hong Kong on Tuesday (18 November) when he shared a significant trend of shipowners increasingly opting for high sulphur fuel oil (HSFO) paired with scrubbers, driven by the pursuit of the “cheapest compliant fuel”.

Despite a narrowing spread between high and low sulphur fuels – from approximately USD 125 to USD 80, and occasionally below USD 70 – shipowners continue to see long-term investment returns from scrubbers. This shift suggests a potentially more competitive and shrinking market for low sulphur fuel oil (LSFO).

“Geopolitical instabilities, particularly armed conflicts, sanctions and trade wars, are creating considerable market distortions. These instabilities lead to supply disruptions, cargo rerouting, and impact bunker prices,” added Choong.

“Compliance has become a paramount concern, with recent substantial fines underscoring the risks involved. The current economic slowdown, compounded by sanctions and self-sanctioning, presents a ‘double pain’ for the market.

“The market’s daily volatility is also heavily influenced by global politics, making it challenging to assess without a deep understanding of geopolitical events.”

To ensure marine fuel quality, Equatorial emphasises managing its own supply chain and operating its own fleet of bunkering vessels, allowing for direct control from delivery to the customer, he stated.

This approach prioritises transparency and security, fostering long-term relationships where quality issues can be collaboratively addressed. Knowledge sharing, especially concerning parameters from new bunker fuel testing methods such as Gas Chromatography Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS), is also deemed crucial.

Supporting the transition to alternative marine fuels, while acknowledging the uncertainty surrounding the dominant future fuel, Equatorial has strategically invested in IMO Type 2 chemical tankers capable of handling methanol, biofuel, and conventional bunker fuels.

“Biofuel is identified as the most effective short-term solution, offering favourable pricing and operational costs compared to other green alternatives,” explained Choong.

“However, challenges include feedstock availability and potential export quotas from key producing nations like China.

“The adoption of alternative marine fuels necessitates a closer, more collaborative relationship between buyers and sellers.

“This involves detailed discussions on specific fuel specifications beyond standard ISO requirements, extensive lab sampling, and long-term commitments from both parties, particularly given the absence of a liquid hedging market for biofuels.

“Collaboration across safety, quality, and commercial aspects is essential for the successful implementation of bio bunker fuels to the future maritime market.”

 

Photo credit: International Bunker Industry Association
Published: 1 December, 2025

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