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Ammonia-Fuelled Two-Stroke Engine Clears Second Factory Acceptance Test in Green Propulsion Milestone
By MGN Editorial•May 21, 2026 at 12:00 PM
An ammonia-fuelled two-stroke marine engine has successfully passed its second factory acceptance test (FAT), marking another significant step forward in the commercialisation of zero-carbon alternative fuel propulsion for deep-sea shipping.
## Ammonia Engine Advances Toward Commercial Deployment After Second FAT
The maritime industry's push toward zero-carbon propulsion has reached another landmark, with an ammonia-fuelled two-stroke engine successfully completing its second factory acceptance test (FAT), according to Offshore Energy.
The development follows what was previously described as the world's first type approval test (TAT) for such an engine, underscoring the accelerating pace of progress in alternative fuel technology for large commercial vessels. Factory acceptance tests are critical validation stages in the engine development process, confirming that a unit meets specified performance and safety requirements before delivery and installation aboard a vessel.
### Why This Matters
Ammonia is widely regarded as one of the most promising zero-carbon fuels for deep-sea shipping, owing to its relatively high energy density, established global production and distribution infrastructure, and the absence of carbon dioxide in its combustion cycle. However, its adoption has been tempered by significant engineering challenges, including its toxicity, corrosive properties, and the complexity of achieving stable combustion in large two-stroke engines of the type that power the majority of the world's oceangoing fleet.
Successfully passing a second FAT signals that developers are moving beyond proof-of-concept and into the pre-commercial phase, building confidence among shipowners, classification societies, and flag states that ammonia propulsion can be safely and reliably deployed at scale.
### Regulatory and Market Context
The milestone arrives as the International Maritime Organization (IMO) presses ahead with its revised greenhouse gas strategy, which targets net-zero emissions from international shipping by or around 2050. Shipowners and operators face mounting pressure to identify credible decarbonisation pathways, and the maturation of ammonia engine technology provides a tangible option for newbuild projects and, potentially, future retrofits.
Classification societies and engine manufacturers have been investing heavily in ammonia propulsion research and development, with several major players racing to bring commercially viable solutions to market ahead of anticipated tightening of emissions regulations in the late 2020s and early 2030s.
The successful completion of this second FAT is expected to bolster confidence across the supply chain and may accelerate ordering activity for ammonia-ready and ammonia-fuelled tonnage in the near term.
#ammonia fuel#alternative fuels#two-stroke engine#green propulsion#decarbonisation#zero-carbon shipping#factory acceptance test#marine engines
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