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Clean Tyne Transition Roadmap

A large cargo ship carrying multiple colorful shipping containers moves across a vast expanse of blue water, with a smaller boat visible in the distance.

Clean Tyne, a UK’s Clean Maritime Demonstration consortium, has created the Digitalised and Decarbonised Port Transition Roadmap for the Port of Tyne and other UK ports to support their journey to net-zero.

The project consortium including Port of Tyne, Siemens, Newcastle University, North East Local Enterprise Partnership and Connected Places Catapult leveraged their extensive technical expertise, academic research and wider industry knowledge to define a path to net zero enabled by a real-time digital platform. This universal blueprint for decarbonisation can be replicated in other port environments as well as other industries.

There are significant barriers to achieving decarbonisation of port operations and providing clean shore power. There is currently a lack of evidence on where energy is used or wasted, as well as the best market/financial drivers for energy provision. And the ability to determine optimal energy vector mixes for their relative levels (e.g., load sharing, peak shaving, storage and distribution).

The digital platform will play a fundamental role throughout the port’s decarbonisation journey by supporting the creation of business cases, scenario planning and investment cases. It will also allow the project consortium to assess the technical, environmental and economic impact of the port in the future.

The Clean Tyne consortium held ‘The Sustainable, Smart Port’ event at the 2050 Innovation Hub at Port of Tyne on the 6th of April. The Secretary of State for Transport, Grant Shapps, provided a personalised message for the consortium. You can catch up on the event here.

The key takeaway from this event is that the consortium has identified four key intervention streams that must be delivered together if net zero 2050 is to be achieved:

  1. Energy Generation and Asset Electrification
  2. Understanding of Business Model
  3. Digital Platform Development
  4. Infrastructure Development

These are actions port operators should consider in the short, medium and long term to enable cleaner, sustainable and more effective operations. As well as inspiring a change of mindset and process within the maritime industry.

Whilst this roadmap sets out a possible timeline for implementing changes to satisfy the 2050 goal, we recognise that this roadmap will need to be refreshed to reflect the evolving world and market.

To find out more about the Transition Roadmap, please get in touch with Howie Chau: howie.chau@cp.catapult.org

You can download the interactive Roadmap pdf below.