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Ammonia and LNG Mark Major Milestones in Maritime's Clean Energy Transition

By MGN EditorialApril 10, 2026 at 12:44 AM

World's first ocean-going ammonia dual-fuel vessels named by EXMAR in South Korea, while China completes its first domestically-built 180,000 m³ LNG carrier, signaling accelerating momentum in maritime decarbonization and global shipbuilding competition.

The maritime industry has achieved two significant clean energy milestones this week, marking a decisive shift toward alternative fuels and reinforcing Asia's dominance in advanced shipbuilding. ## Ammonia Vessels Enter Service Belgium-based EXMAR has named the *Antwerpen* and *Arlon*, the world's first ocean-going ammonia dual-fuel mid-size gas carriers (MGC) at 46,000 m³ capacity. The vessels represent the culmination of a joint development program begun more than three and a half years ago with South Korea's HD Hyundai, underscoring the critical partnership between European shipping operators and Korean shipyards in advancing decarbonization technology. Ammonia's emergence as a viable shipping fuel addresses a critical challenge in maritime decarbonization. Unlike methanol or LNG, ammonia produces zero carbon emissions when burned, though handling and storage present technical considerations that EXMAR and HD Hyundai have now validated at scale. The dual-fuel design offers operational flexibility as global fuel infrastructure develops. ## China's LNG Innovation Accelerates China independently designed and constructed its first 180,000 cubic meter LNG carrier, completed this week in Nantong, Jiangsu province. The achievement marks a significant step forward for domestic Chinese shipbuilding in high value-added segments previously dominated by South Korea and Japan, expanding capacity in the vital LNG transport sector. Complementing these vessel achievements, design engineering firm GTT has received an order from Beijing Petrochemical Engineering and Shaanxi Yanchang Petroleum for a 10,000 m³ onshore LNG storage tank at China's Yangjiawan LNG liquefaction plant. The infrastructure investment signals continued expansion of LNG liquefaction and export capability in Asia. ## Market Momentum Continues Asia's shipyards continue capturing major orders. Hanwha Ocean secured a 393.3 billion won contract for two VLCCs from an Oceania-based shipowner, with delivery scheduled for January 2030, demonstrating sustained demand in the tanker sector despite broader fleet transformation. ## Port Infrastructure Investment The Port of Los Angeles secured approximately $70 million from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for harbor maintenance, seismic resiliency, and navigational safety—a record allocation from the Harbor Maintenance Trust Fund. The San Pedro Bay port complex received $131.8 million total, reflecting U.S. commitment to port infrastructure modernization. ## Implications These developments reflect the maritime industry's multi-pronged approach to decarbonization: alternative fuel vessel technology (ammonia), established LNG infrastructure, and strategic port investment. Asia's shipbuilding dominance in both conventional and advanced vessel segments continues, while regulatory and capital pressures are accelerating both newbuild investment and port modernization globally.
#ammonia fuels#LNG carriers#maritime decarbonization#shipbuilding#clean shipping#Asia yards#port infrastructure

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