We are thrilled to announce a new article in the journal Transportation Research Part D : Transport and Environment. This paper was developed in collaboration with Professor Haiying Jia (https://www.nhh.no/en/employees/faculty/haiying-jia/) from the Department of Business and Management Science at Norwegian School of Economics, who was a visiting professor at the MIT Center for Transportation & Logistics in 2019. Our visiting student in the summers of 2019 and 2020, Gabriela Rubio-Domingo, was also key to the development of the paper. Congratulations to the team!

Abstract

International seaborne transport of crude oil takes place mainly on tankers, with annual seaborne crude flows totaling an estimated 12 billion barrels. To take into account the carbon footprint on crude oil from its international distribution segment, we utilize a micro-level dataset of more than 28,000 individual shipment samples to estimate each journey’s carbon emissions. The unique detailed dataset enables us to aggregate carbon emissions at the country level for importers and exporters, by trade lane, and by vessel size categories. Our methodology provides a framework for crude oil consumers to dynamically account for the carbon footprint of the commodity which is transported via different trade routes and by different vessels (size and age). So far, this dynamic emissions accounting has been largely neglected by oil consumers who typically apply one single emission factor regardless its supply chain. Our results highlight the importance for importers to consider the origin and point-of-use of crude oil in order to have a comprehensive view of its carbon footprint. The quantitative analysis in this study can feed into well-to-tank fuel emissions factors for oil and oil products in order to adopt dynamic emissions factors in companies’ carbon accounting. Finally, our research is important for the design of new environmental policies for the corporate Environmental Social Governance (ESG) reporting to include downstream logistics in the overall emission accounting of oil companies.

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Reference Article

Suzanne Greene, Haiying Jia, Gabriela Rubio-Domingo. Well-to-tank carbon emissions from crude oil maritime transportation. Transportation Research Part D: Transport and Environment.
Volume 88, 2020, 102587, ISSN 1361-9209, https://doi-org.ezproxy.canberra.edu.au/10.1016/j.trd.2020.102587.