EU ETS PUTS EMPHASIS ON ENGINE OPTIMISATION

Feb 23, 2026 | Marine propulsion & machinery news

According to German engine diagnostics specialist CM Technologies (CMT), with maritime transport now operating under the 100% phase-in of the EU Emissions Trading System, shipowners are placing greater emphasis on engine optimisation as a means of controlling emissions-related operating costs.

From 1 January 2026, vessels trading between EU ports have been required to surrender EU allowances for the full volume of verified GHG emissions, bringing the transition period that began in 2024 to an end. Emissions costs are no longer treated as just another compliance issue but considered an important factor in voyage economics.

Industry reports published at the start of 2026 indicate that full ETS compliance now adds about US$ 320/t of VLSFO consumed on intra-EU voyages, based on prevailing allowance prices and regulated fuel emission factors. While the exact cost varies with carbon markets and exchange rates, CMT says the scale of the exposure has sharpened operational focus on fuel efficiency and combustion quality.

David Fuhlbrügge, CMT joint MD, said: “Under full ETS exposure, emissions costs are clearly visible at voyage level, which means even modest inefficiencies now have a direct financial impact.”

According to the company, incremental losses in combustion efficiency remain among the most common sources of avoidable emissions. Retarded ignition timing, uneven cylinder loading or injector degradation often develop gradually and may not trigger alarms, yet they steadily increase fuel consumption. Under the ETS framework, each additional tonne of fuel burned directly increases allowance requirements.

Fuhlbrügge added: “Shipowners and managers are making greater use of performance data, fuel monitoring and combustion analysis to control fuel consumption and manage emissions exposure as carbon pricing becomes embedded in daily operations.”

This is being reinforced by major classification societies. Recent guidance from DNV and ClassNK has indicated that managing EU ETS exposure requires closer operational control of fuel consumption and engine performance, alongside robust monitoring and verification of emissions data. CMT says the combination of regulatory guidance and early operational experience under the ETS is driving a more proactive approach to engine optimisation, with operators seeking to identify and correct small efficiency losses before they translate into emissions costs.

The company reports growing interest in onboard combustion analysis to assess ignition timing and cylinder balance under real operating conditions, allowing adjustments to be made. At the same time, wear-related efficiency losses under low-sulphur fuel operation are being monitored more closely, as liner and piston-ring wear can increase friction and fuel demand well before traditional maintenance thresholds are reached. The expansion of the EU ETS scope in 2026 to include methane and NOx further increases the importance of combustion quality, CMT added.

Fuhlbrügge said: “These gases have a significantly higher global warming potential than CO2, meaning incomplete combustion events can result in a disproportionate rise in carbon-equivalent emissions. The ETS price itself is outside an operator’s control, but what has changed is that engine performance now feeds directly into emissions cost. Maintaining efficient combustion is no longer just good engineering practice, it is part of managing operating risk in the carbon market.”

CMT expects engine optimisation to become more tightly integrated with emissions reporting, voyage analysis and commercial decision-making as ETS costs become fully embedded in charterparty negotiations.

Image: Shipmanagers are making greater use of engine data to manage emissions exposure, according to CMT (source: CMT)

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