Argus Sustainable Marine Fuels Conference
Agenda for 2024
Welcome day and drinks reception
- 17:00 - 18:00
Registration and welcome drinks reception
Conference Day 2
- 08:00 - 09:00
Breakfast sponsored by Woodside and registration
- 09:00 - 09:05
Chairperson’s introduction and opening remarks
David Cummins
PresidentBlue Sky Maritime Coalition- 09:05 - 09:45
Clean fuel policy, incentives and regulation in North America – what opportunities are in place to support the widespread adoption oF sustainable fuels in the maritime sector?
Focusing on the developments of the Low Carbon Fuel Standard (LCFS), Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), EU ETS, FuelEU maritime, IMO.
• How can the supply chain ensure compliance across all layers of regulations? Will we see a global fuel standard with the various EU policies, IRA guidance for hydrogen production etc? How is the industry navigating those regulatory boundaries?
• What influence does the EU ETS and Fuel EU maritime have on North America? How likely is the EU ETS to be replicated in North America?
• What are the policy, fiscal measures and carbon pricing mechanisms that are either incentivizing or holding back domestic marine fuel adoption?
• Would a levy on fuels or carbon pricing level the playing field between conventional and low carbon fuels? Will we see the EU ETS serve as a template for a similar US model?Galen Hon
Office of Environment & InnovationUnited States Maritime Administration (MARAD)Monte Shaw
Executive DirectorIowa Renewable Fuels AssociationJennifer Garson
Senior Vice PresidentBoundary StoneJan League
Detachment ChiefU.S. Coast GuardAdrian Tolson
Board MemberIBIA- 09:45 - 10:25
How are bunker suppliers and traders widening their offerings of sustainable marine fuels?
• How are bunkering companies going to ensure they have the right fuel at the right ports at the right time? How do we aggregate the right volumes to the right ports?
• What partnership agreements are already in place with suppliers of sustainable fuels and bunkering companies? Which shipping segments that bunker in North America will be able to access the different sustainable fuels by 2030?
• What sustainable fuels are bunker suppliers and traders currently seeing the most interest in from customers? How do we see this evolving in the next 5 years?Speakers Include:
Elizabeth Moody
Energy Seeding ManagerSumitomo CorporationGuido Cardullo
Head of Business DevelopmentFratelli CosulichRalph Matlack
Chief ExecutiveFourth TackStefka Wechsler
Marine Fuel Editor and Pricing AnalystArgus- 10:25 - 11:00
Shell's presentation on fossil LNG all the way to net zero LNG
Krishna Achuthanandam
Head of Marine LNG Business Development - PCC, Cruise, I&CShell Marine- 11:00 - 11:30
Networking coffee break sponsored by Curoil
- 11:30 - 12:00
Argus’ global marine fuels snapshot and outlook
• What is the financial viability of sustainable marine fuels vs fossil fuels?
• Lessons in sustainable marine fuels demand learned from this year’s EU ETS CO2 marine fuel charges
• What are the global bunker trends we expect in 2025?Stefka Wechsler
Marine Fuel Editor and Pricing AnalystArgus- 12:00 - 12:30
The role of sustainability certification, lifecycle analysis and implications for marine fuels
• How is carbon intensity (CI) calculated? What are the GHG calculations across value chains?
• How can we ensure sustainability in feedstock production and the traceability of sustainable products through the supply chain?
• What is the role of carbon indexing and offsetting?
• How will lifecycle analysis be measured? With the CII not considering the full lifecycle carbon emissions – how will that measurement be determined over the coming years as CII regulations evolve and get finalised by 2026?Speakers Include:
Dario Formenti
System Manager Sustainable FuelsInternational Sustainability & Carbon Certification (ISCC)Jim Seely
Vice President of Oil and Gas SolutionsAuthentix- 12:30 - 13:30
Networking Lunch
- 13:30 - 14:15
Sustainable fuel producer perspectives: what is the roadmap to commercialisation, adoption and availability of these fuels at the scale needed?
(ammonia, methanol, hydrogen, LNG)
• How will alternative fuels overcome the logistical and availability challenges needed to scale up globally?
• Will certain fuels dominate certain types of vessels? What shipping segments is your business focused on for marine fuels?
• How are end users and fuel producers working together to de-risk investments?
• How are fuel producers addressing risk factors and potential unintended consequences in areas such as safety, handling and storage of potential new sustainable fuels?Eric Pedroso
VP CommercialHIF GlobalBruce Selkirk
Chief ExecutiveNaceroGriff Lane
SVP OperationsSunGas RenewablesMorgan Hughes
New Energy Business Development ManagerWoodside EnergySteve Petridis
Special Advisor to the ChairmanAir Products- 14:15 - 15:00
What volumes of biofuels can we expect to see in North America and other major ports globally in the next few years?
• How does the Renewable Fuel for Ocean-Going Vessels Act enable biofuel producers to meet low carbon fuel needs at a competitive price? What does this mean for refiners and blenders?
• Are biofuels a practical and sustainable response to the FuelEU Maritime regulation?
• Food vs fuel - what feedstocks are available for the shipping industry? How much of the shipping fuel could be covered by biofuels? Will it end up being a huge percentage of the total supply structure or push into methanol and ammonia shares of the market?Speakers Include:
Russell Sachs
Fuel Oil TraderMaerskMac Marshall
VP Market IntelligenceUnited Soybean BoardJon Scharingson
Executive Director Strategic InitiativesChevron-Renewable Energy GroupEmily Newes
Group ManagerNational Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)Jacqueline Reigle
Manager, Biofuels Outlook & AnalyticsArgus- 15:00 - 15:45
Coffee break sponsored by Curoil
- 15:50 - 16:45
Green corridors vs clean fuel hubs – what role are ports playing in unlocking decarbonisation opportunities landside and seaside?
• With the port being one of the best positioned locations for driving decarbonisation, how can we improve the connectivity of intermodal transportation?
• How can we leverage major energy export market projects to decarbonise ports and the industry in order to accommodate a flexible, multifuel future?
• How can ports make sure they are ready to handle and store alternative fuels?
• Would clean fuel hubs be more efficient than green corridors for all shipping lines?Desmond Tay
Regional Director (Americas)Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA)Lucian Go
Environmental Program ManagerPort of SeattleOleksiy Tatarenko
Senior Principal, Climate-Aligned IndustriesRocky Mountain Institute (RMI)Josh Messner
Technology Manager, Bioenergy Technologies OfficeUnited States Department of EnergyGalen Hon
Office of Environment & InnovationUnited States Maritime Administration (MARAD)- 16:45 - 16:50
Chairperson’s closing remarks
David Cummins
PresidentBlue Sky Maritime Coalition- 17:00 - 18:30
Cocktail hour
Conference day 3
- 08:00 - 09:00
Breakfast and registration
- 09:00 - 09:05
Chairperson’s opening remarks
David Cummins
PresidentBlue Sky Maritime Coalition- 09:05 - 10:00
Turning the net zero ambition into reality and fostering better collaboration
• What holistic supply solutions are available for the industry? And how do we re-establish and re-distribute risk across the value chain through the book and claim system?
• How to mitigate the upstream costs associated with the build-out of new infrastructure, renewable electricity and access financing. How can industry, government and finance work together to ensure fuel projects are competitive and profitable?
• What level of commitment is needed from shipowners to facilitate the transition to alternative fuel infrastructure? How can we encourage the uptake of innovative technologies in the decarbonisation of the maritime supply chain?Speakers Include:
Desmond Tay
Regional Director (Americas)Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore (MPA)Marinus Jansen
Global Marine Technology StewardCaterpillar MarineThomas Damsgaard
Head of AmericasBIMCOWilliam Boatwright
Senior Manager-Logistics and Climate SolutionsNordenTom Strang
SVP Maritime AffairsCarnival Corporation & plcPeter Keller
ChairmanSEA-LNGAdrian Tolson
Board MemberIBIA- 10:00 - 10:50
Shipowner and operators’ perspectives: what sustainable fuels are they gravitating towards?
• What changes are being made in regards to fuel procurement? How can shipowners achieve more multi-fuel offtake agreements to provide certainty for fuel producers to invest in new energy projects?
• Are charterers looking to co-invest in decarbonisation measures and take on more long term charter? How are shipowners and charterers working together on decarbonising their fleets?
• What regulatory clarity and alignment is needed and how is it impacting decision making on shipowner fuel procurement?Colin Fleming
Senior Manager, Green & Sustainability PlanningOcean Network Express (ONE)Tomoaki Ichida
Managing Executive Officer (Americas)MOL (Americas) LLCTsuyoshi Ohkawa
Managing Director, Energy DivisionNYK Group Americas IncJhander Marval
Senior General Manager - Head of CPP OperationsUltranavHarold Boyer
Head of Commercial – MSTAETGabriel Cotrim
Head of CommercialOrsted- 10:50 - 11:30
Coffee break sponsored by Curoil
- 11:30 - 12:00
Technological perspectives: what operational measures are available for shipowners?
Focusing on vessel speed, maintenance and route optimization, digitalization and carbon capture.
• How is a shipboard carbon capture system different from land based? Is CO2 on-board carbon capture and storage cost and efficient? Is it practical for lifecycle emissions counting?
• Tackling downstream challenges for carbon capture – how can we discharge the carbon ashore? How to deal with operation aspects such as energy consumption and the impact on OpEx.
• What cloud-based technologies such as weather routing and voyage optimisation have the potential to maximise carbon efficiency and reduce the environmental footprint?
Speakers Include:
Thomas Damsgaard
Head of AmericasBIMCONirmal Gnanapragasam
Principal Scientist, Hydrogen Technologies BranchCanadian Nuclear Laboratories- 12:00 - 12:45
What decarbonisation efforts are we seeing in the inland waterways?
• How are tugs, barges and ferries thinking about the risk of investing capital on emergent technologies and fuels? What innovative solutions are they leaning towards?
• How can deep water shipping cooperate with inland brown water shipping? How can smaller vessels be pilots for larger vessels?
• Will the federal government provide incentives and encourage deployment of alternative fuels for inland waterways?Speakers Include:
Benjamin Parrish
Project ManagerKirby CorpTony Odak
Chief Operating OfficerStone OilDoug Downing
Chief Financial OfficerCanal BargeDavid Cummins
PresidentBlue Sky Maritime Coalition- 12:45 - 13:30
What sustainable finance products are available for maritime ship owners, sustainable fuels and technology companies?
Looking at products such as green bonds, loans, renewable energy equity financing and carbon credits.
• How can fuel producers build a strong business case to demonstrate their project’s bankability through achieving long-lasting off-take agreements?
• What financing and investment vehicles are necessary to de-risk the fuels and technology needed to get to net zero?
• How to overcome barriers of investing in decarbonisation measures without the certainty of return on investment? How can we find a balance between the need to invest with the risks of adopting new technologies and fuels?Ben Padilla
Executive DirectorFPG AIMKyriakos Metaxas
Chief Investment OfficerArista GroupJonathan Hough
Managing DirectorMarathon CapitalPavel Chernyshov
Co-founderArkview Capital- 13:30 - 14:30
Networking lunch break and end of conference