Methanol: technology matures – infrastructure follows suit
As promising as methanol technology is for the maritime energy transition, it is also clear that the availability of green methanol is still limited at present. While the technology is making great strides and customer interest is huge, there is not only a lack of green fuel, but in many places also a lack of the necessary infrastructure to use methanol as a marine fuel across the board.
"I am convinced that the question is no longer whether methanol will arrive in shipping, but only when we will experience the breakthrough together," says Denise Kurtulus, adding: "The technology is ready, customers are interested – now we need the infrastructure and the political will to promote it."
The path to the fleet: single fuel as the goal, dual fuel as the bridge
To bridge the gap until green methanol is widely available, Rolls-Royce engineers are also testing dual-fuel engines as a bridge technology: these engines can run on 100 per cent diesel or a flexible proportion of methanol. This allows customers to remain flexible while improving their carbon footprint the more they drive with the highest possible proportion of methanol.
Outlook: From the test bench to the future
With the successful run of the full engine and the findings from the test bench tests, an important step has been taken. The next project phases will focus on system integration and fine-tuning for real-world application profiles.
What began quietly with a small idea now has a strong, loud and powerful-sounding technical foundation: the world's first high-speed single-fuel methanol engine makes the vision of CO₂-free shipping with combustion engines more tangible than ever before.