Black Carbon Ship Emission Measurements
The impact of black carbon (BC) emissions on climate change, human health, and the environment is well-documented in the scientific literature. Although BC still remains largely unregulated at the international level, efforts have been made to reduce emissions of BC and Particulate Matter (PM2.5), particularly in sectors such as energy production, industry, and road transport. In contrast, the maritime shipping industry has made limited progress in reducing BC emissions from ships, mainly due to the absence of stringent BC emission regulations. While the International Maritime Organization (IMO) has established emission limits for pollutants such as SOx, NOx, and VOCs under MARPOL Annex VI, as of today, BC emissions from ships are still unregulated at the international level. Whereas it was anticipated that PM2.5 and BC emissions would be reduced with the adoption of the SOx regulations, especially within the sulfur emission control areas (SECA), this study reveals that BC emissions are only partially affected by the current MARPOL Annex VI regulations. Based on 886 real-world black carbon (BC) emission measurements from ships operating in the southern North Sea, the study demonstrates that SECA-compliant fuels do contribute to a notable decrease in BC emissions. However, it is important to note that the average BC emission factors (EFs) within the SECA remain comparable in magnitude to those reported for non-compliant fuels in earlier studies. Moreover, ships using exhaust gas cleaning systems (EGCSs) as a SECA-compliant measure were found to emit significantly higher levels of BC, raising concerns about the environmental sustainability of EGCSs as an emissions mitigation strategy.
Simple
- Date (Création)
- 2025-07-16T11:09:07Z
- Date (Révision)
- 2025-07-16T11:10:49Z
- Date (Publication)
- 2026-01-26T16:15:18.505Z
- Date (Création)
- 2016-05-19
- Identificateur
-
bmdc.be:dataset:2981
Belgian Marine Data Centre
- Autres informations de référence
-
This dataset is composed of the following sources: Ward Van Roy (n.d.). black carbon (BC) Ship Emission Measurements .
- Thème
-
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Fuel Sulphur Content
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air pollution
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airborne monitoring
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marine environment
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Sulfur dioxide
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Nitrogen dioxide
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Sulfur Emission Control Areas
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Nitrogen Emission Control Area
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Emission Control Area
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ship emissions
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- Contraintes d'utilisation
- Autres restrictions
- Autres contraintes
- https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
- Contraintes d'accès
- Autres restrictions
- Autres contraintes
-
Pas de restrictions concernant l'accès public.
- Limitation d'utilisation
-
Aucune condition ne s'applique à l'utilisation.
- Restrictions de manipulation
- Non classifié
- Type de représentation spatiale
- Tabulaire
- Langue
- English
- Catégorie ISO
-
- Océans
- Exclusion
- Oui
- Date
- Code
- Belgian Coast
- Exclusion
- Oui
- Date
- Exclusion
- Oui
- Date
- Code
- Scheldt Estuary
- gml32:beginPosition
- 2021-01-01
- gml32:endPosition
- 2025-07-16
- Nom du système de référence
- EPSG / http://www.opengis.net/def/crs/EPSG/0/4258
- Format (encodage)
-
-
application/vnd.ms-excel
(
Unknown
)
-
application/vnd.ms-excel
(
Unknown
)
Distributeur
- Nom
-
application/vnd.ms-excel
- Version
-
Unknown
- Taille de transfert
- 0.581333
- Ressource en ligne
-
black carbon (BC) Ship Emission Measurements. Ward Van Roy
(
WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download
)
An HTTP link to download this dataset in Excel
- Ressource en ligne
- Digital Object Identifier (DOI) ( DOI )
- Niveau
- Jeu de données
- Généralités sur la provenance
-
The BC EFs (in g BC/kg fuel) were calculated by analyzing the concentrations of BC and CO2. As the exhaust plume is crossed with the aircraft, the concentrations of BC and CO2 increase, creating peaks that are higher than the background concentrations observed before and after the peak. The surface areas of these peaks above the background concentrations are used to calculate the BC EFs. To estimate the amount of fuel burned in kilograms, the carbon (C) content is multiplied by the carbon content of marine fuels (87%). Ships were identified based on AIS information. The AIS data includes ship identification and navigation parameters like speed and course. With the ship identification from AIS, engine characteristics were obtained from the SURV Ship Database. To correct the ship speed with real-time tidal currents, data from the RBINS ECODAM model was used. The corrected speeds were used with the propeller law to calculate the engine load.
- Identifiant de la fiche
- bmdc.be:dataset:2981 XML
- Langue
- English
- Jeu de caractères
- Utf8
- Type de ressource
- Jeu de données
- Date des métadonnées
- 2026-01-26T16:15:18.504Z
- Nom du standard de métadonnées
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Geographic information -- Metadata
- Version du standard de métadonnées
-
ISO 19115:2003/19139
RBINS metadata catalog