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West Indies Petroleum, Sunoco team up to boost Jamaica as Caribbean bunker fuel hub

Partnership, which began on 1 January, is expected to address key challenges in the marine fuel market, particularly related to credit and supply chain operations.

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West Indies Petroleum, Sunoco team up to boost Jamaica as Caribbean bunker fuel hub

Caribbean energy company West Indies Petroleum (WIP) recently announced a partnership with US energy infrastructure firm Sunoco to distribute marine fuel in the Caribbean through Jamaica. 

The partnership aims to position Jamaica to become a major marine fuel hub in the Caribbean region.

Charles Chambers, Chief Executive Officer, WIP, said: “This collaboration with Sunoco will dramatically enhance the WIP group of companies’ ability to serve vessels operating in Caribbean waters.

The partnership, which began on 1 January, is expected to address key challenges in the marine fuel market, particularly related to credit and supply chain operations.  

“Marine fuel transactions involve very large volumes and require significant credit capacity both from suppliers and for customers,” Chambers explained.  

“Sunoco’s scale and financial strength will allow us to offer more competitive terms to vessel operators, potentially attracting ships that currently fuel at other ports,” he continued.

Sunoco recently increased its Caribbean and Latin American presence through the acquisitions of Peerless in Puerto Rico and expanded their mid-stream and pipeline assets via the acquisition of NuStar Energy. The latter came with a bunker business in Houston which Sunoco has maintained and seeks to develop further.

Sunoco also brings substantial financial strength and operational expertise to the partnership.  The company is a leading operator of critical energy infrastructure in North America and is the continent’s largest independent fuel distributor of branded and unbranded fuel, distributing over 8.5 billion gallons annually across more than 40 states and the Caribbean. 

There are over 5,000 Sunoco stations across the United States and the company has been actively expanding its marine fuel operations.

WIP, which has operated in Jamaica’s marine fuel sector for over a decade, will leverage its local market knowledge and infrastructure while benefiting from Sunoco’s robust supply chain and credit capabilities.  The partnership transforms several of WIP’s current cost centres, such as tank storage services and vessel operations, into revenue generators.

The partnership is expected to significantly increase marine fuel sales volumes in Jamaica by establishing the country as a premier bunkering hub in the Caribbean, especially given its strategic location along several major shipping routes. This could have broader economic benefits, potentially increasing port activity and related services.

WIP also provides fuel import, export, distribution, retail, lubricants, and storage services. With storage in excess of 750,000 barrels, the company boasts the largest fuel bunker capabilities in Jamaica.

 

Photo credit: West Indies Petroleum
Published: 20 February, 2025

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Alternative Fuels

MOL inks bio-LNG bunker fuel supply deals with Titan and Axpo for car carriers in Europe

Titan, part of Amsterdam-based Molgas, will continue to supply bio-LNG fuel in Northwest Europe, while Axpo will take charge of supply in the Mediterranean region.

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MOL inks bio-LNG bunker fuel supply deals with Titan and Axpo for car carriers in Europe

Mitsui OSK Lines (MOL) on Thursday (18 July) said it has signed new supply agreements in Northern Europe and the Mediterranean region to expand the use of bio-LNG marine fuel on MOL-operated LNG-fuelled car carriers.

Titan, part of Amsterdam-based Molgas, will continue to supply bio-LNG fuel in Northwest Europe, while Axpo will take charge of supply in the Mediterranean region.

MOL said the agreement makes it possible for its company to supply bio-LNG fuel for automobile carriers in the Mediterranean region, specifically Port of Malaga and Barcelona in Spain, following the bio-LNG fuel supply agreement in Western Europe, which commenced in March last year.

The bio-LNG fuel to be supplied in this initiative has a lifecycle carbon intensity (carbon dioxide emissions per unit of energy consumption) of -15 g-CO2/MJ or less, from production through consumption. Furthermore, this bio-LNG fuel has obtained International Sustainability and Carbon Certification (ISCC-EU). 

“Through this supply agreement, MOL has established a framework that ensures a continuous and stable supply of bio-LNG fuel not only in Northern Europe but also in the Mediterranean,” the company said.

As part of the group’s efforts to adopt alternative fuels and achieve net-zero greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, it is utilising LNG-fuelled vessels as a bridge solution to facilitate the transition to carbon-neutral fuels such as bio-LNG and synthetic LNG (e-methane).

In 2025, MOL signed a bio LNG fuel supply agreement in Northwest Europe with Titan, part of the Molgas, and MOL has continued this bio LNG fuel supply agreement with the same company in 2026 as well.

 

Photo credit: Mitsui OSK Lines
Published: 19 June, 2026

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Biofuel

Kvasir Technologies lands EUR 10 million to scale bio bunker fuel production

The Danish biofuel startup raised the fund in a Series A investment round, which will provide capital to develop and design a new commercial production plant and scale climate-neutral drop-in marine fuel.

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Kvasir Technologies lands EUR 10 million to scale bio bunker fuel production

Danish biofuel startup Kvasir Technologies on Thursday (18 June) said it has raised EUR 10 million (USD 11.4 million) in a Series A investment round with participation from European Energy as a new investor, alongside existing investors EIFO, Maersk Growth and Footprint Fund. 

The Series A round provides capital to develop and design a new commercial production plant and scale climate-neutral drop-in fuel to be used in existing vessels.

At the same time, European Energy and Kvasir Technologies are entering into a strategic partnership by establishing the company KVEEN Biofuels, which is working towards the construction of a commercial-scale plant to produce biofuels using Kvasir Technologies’ patented technology.

“This investment round enables us to take the next crucial steps in developing and scaling our technology. At the same time, it underlines that there is still strong support for solutions that can deliver real climate impact in the maritime sector,” said Joachim Bachmann Nielsen, Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering and CEO of Kvasir Technologies.

Kvasir Technologies, a spin-out from research at the Technical University of Denmark (DTU), has developed a new technology to convert a wide range of non-edible lignin- based residues from agriculture and forestry into refined biofuels for shipping.

The climate-neutral biofuel can serve as an immediate replacement for fossil marine fuel without the need to modify ship engines or change existing infrastructure.

The new funding will be used, among other things, to scale the technology at Kvasir Technologies’ test facility in Fredericia, which can produce up to 2 metric tonnes (mt) of biofuel per day.

At the same time, development work will begin on the first commercial plant in the city of Aabenraa in the southern part of Jutland, which will demonstrate the technology on an industrial scale.

 

Photo credit: Kvasir Technologies
Published: 19 June, 2026

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ECA

DNV: North-east Atlantic joins expanding network of ECAs

DNV highlighted key information on the new North-East Atlantic ECA, which will enter into force on 1 September 2027, following recent amendments MARPOL Annex VI adopted at MEPC 84.

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RESIZED william william on Unsplash

Classification society DNV on Wednesday (17 June) highlighted key information on the new North-East Atlantic ECA, which will enter into force on 1 September 2027 following recent amendments MARPOL Annex VI adopted at MEPC 84, creating a continuous emissions control area across much of the North Atlantic: 

Need to Know

  • The new North-East Atlantic ECA will enter into force on 1 September 2027, creating a continuous emissions control area across much of the North Atlantic.
  • SOx limits (0.10% sulphur) will apply from 1 September 2028.
  • Ships meeting the MARPOL “three‑date” criteria (from 1 January 2027 onward) must comply with Tier III NOx limits for engines above 130 kW when operating in the ECA.

North-East Atlantic ECA

In general, the ECAs are designed to reduce air pollution from NOx, SOx and PM, and play a vital role in protecting sensitive marine environments as well as improving air quality for nearby communities.

The latest addition is the North-East Atlantic ECA, covering the Exclusive Economic Zones (EEZs) and territorial seas of Portugal, Spain, France, Ireland, Iceland, the Faroe Islands, Greenland and mainland UK that are not already included in existing ECAs. The EEZs surrounding Madeira, the Azores and the Canary Islands will be excluded. The precise ECA boundaries are defined by exact coordinates in Appendix VII of the revised MARPOL Annex VI.

Once in force, this designation will create a continuous ECA across the North-East Atlantic, linking the Canadian Arctic, Norwegian Sea, North Sea and Mediterranean Sea ECAs into a single, connected regulatory area.

eca map 2026 1

Application

The North-East Atlantic ECA, as part of the next amendments to Annex VI of MARPOL, will enter into force on 1 September 2027. The effective dates will be as follows:

SOx requirements

The sulphur limits for new North-East Atlantic ECA take effect 12 months after entry into force, in other words on 1 September 2028. From that date onwards, ships must use fuel with a sulphur content of no more than 0.10%.

Alternatively, compliance may be achieved using exhaust gas cleaning systems (EGCS) when operating on higher-sulphur fuels. However, it should be noted that restrictions on the use of open-loop EGCSs are becoming increasingly stringent, particularly in the coastal waters of northern Europe under OSPAR (please refer to our Technical and Regulatory News No. 26/2025), thereby limiting this as a practical compliance option in the region.

Note: The full article by DNV can be read here

 

Photo credit: william william on Unsplash and DNV
Published: 19 June, 2026

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