MSC Exec: A Trump Win Could Pose ‘Challenge’ for Decarbonization

In This Article:

A top exec at Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC) is concerned that a win for Donald Trump in next month’s 2024 presidential election could deliver hurdles to decarbonization efforts across container shipping.

“It’s a challenge for us in shipping to convince a Republican administration that decarbonization is not only something that our business needs…but it also an enormous economic opportunity that I believe both Europe and the U.S. have slept on,” Bud Darr, executive vice president of maritime policy and government affairs at MSC, told the Shipping UK conference in London on Oct. 8.

More from Sourcing Journal

The Trump presidency was heavy on deregulating existing climate legislation, with the U.S. becoming the world’s largest oil producer in 2018 and remaining in that spot ever since. A second Trump term is likely to see more regulatory rollbacks, as well as repeals of tax incentives for corporations to adopt renewable energy.

While none of the world’s ocean freight giants are American, U.S. energy policy has a significant impact on their operations and costs. Despite debuting its own green methanol-enabled Alette Maersk vessel at the Port of Los Angeles in August, Maersk says the fuel now costs two to three times more than fossil fuels due to scarce production of green methanol. Currently, there is nowhere in the U.S. where the Alette could refill with the low-carbon alternative.

MSC CEO Soren Toft and Maersk CEO Vincent Clerc were two of five major shipping leaders at the 2023 United Nations Climate Change Conference last winter who called on the International Maritime Organization (IMO) to set new regulatory conditions to accelerate the industry’s transition to green fuels.

Last month, MSC confirmed that it firmly supports and is committing to net decarbonization by 2050.

MSC’s fleet renewal strategy includes over 100 dual fuel liquefied natural gas (LNG) container ships on order and over 300 retrofits now underway throughout the existing fleet.

“There’s huge potential for developing and bringing to market the technologies, and, more importantly, the fuels that are required for the energy transition,” Darr said. “We’ve got to convince a Republican administration that it’s in their interest if we do change White Houses.”

Darr pointed out some of the disadvantages the container shipping industry has endured during the current Biden administration, including 220 percent tariffs for container chassis coming out of China. He also outlined how the Biden administration slapped a 25 percent tariff on ship-to-shore cranes when there was no production available in the U.S.