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Black Carbon and CO2 Emissions from EU-Regulated Shipping in the Arctic

Nature and the biosphere | Pollution, environmental and human health | Sustainable business and solutions

Published May 2025 by the International Council on Clean Transportation

  • Date (DD-MM-YYYY)

    07-08-2025 to 07-08-2026

    Available on-demand until 7th August 2026

  • Cost

    Free

  • Education type

    Article

  • CPD subtype

    On-demand

Description

The Arctic region is experiencing significant environmental stress due to rapid warming, with temperatures rising 3–4 times faster than the global average. As Arctic shipping activity increases, so do the associated black carbon (BC) emissions. Black carbon has a 100-year global warming potential 900 times greater than that of CO2, and its effects are amplified in the Arctic region due to the albedo effect. These emissions contribute to further warming and environmental degradation, compounding the challenges faced by this already vulnerable region.

The European Union (EU) has committed to addressing shipping emissions as part of its broader Arctic climate strategy. To date, the contribution of EU shipping to emissions in the Arctic has been primarily assessed based on data from EU-flagged ships. However, the number of ships navigating the Arctic to and from EU ports may be substantially higher, suggesting that previous assessments may underestimate the total impact.

This study compares the composition, fuel use, and BC and CO2 emissions of the EU-flagged fleet in the Arctic, defined as ships flying EU flags, and the EU-regulated fleet in the Arctic, defined as ships reporting to the EU Monitoring, Reporting, and Verification (MRV) system, meaning they are voyaging to or from EU ports. To capture the full scope of emissions, we assess impacts across both a broadly defined Geographic Arctic region (north of 59°N) and the more limited Arctic as defined by the International Maritime Organization (IMO)’s Polar Code.

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