Skip to content
1900

Toward Zero-emission Ferries: Integrating Systematic Review and Bibliometric Analysis Insights on Alternative Fuels and Policies

Abstract

The shipping industry aims to achieve full decarbonization at the European Union (EU) level by mid-century. Over the past decade, various alternative fuels have been explored to address this goal. However, challenges such as insufficient bunkering infrastructure, technological immaturity, and high costs have made shipowners hesitant to invest in“clean” propulsion systems. This study conducts a bibliometric analysis, supported by a systematic literature review, to map and critically synthesize current knowledge on alternative fuels for ferry decarbonization and their alignment with emissions reduction policies. Using the Greek ferry fleet as a representative case study, the paper evaluates the regulatory framework and technical characteristics of various fuel options and examines their compatibility with different vessel categories. A qualitative comparative framework is introduced to link policy types with alternative fuel pathways, offering original insights into policy—fuel alignment. The findings highlight methanol and green electricity (battery-electric systems) as highly promising solutions, especially if battery technologies further advance in the coming years. Hydrogen also presents significant potential, but is currently limited by high production costs and infrastructure requirements. Rather than presenting a quantitative decision-making model this review establishes the conceptual basis for such a framework in future research. This paper also offers innovative proposals to accelerate the adoption of zero-emission fuels, addresses key gaps in existing research, and provides insights for advancing ferry decarbonization.

Funding source: Open access funding provided by The Hong Kong Polytechnic University. China Merchants Energy Shipping supports the article processing fees in the context of a PhD research.
Related subjects: Applications & Pathways
Countries: Greece
Loading

Article metrics loading...

/content/journal8267
2025-11-04
2026-03-15

Metrics

/content/journal8267
Loading
This is a required field
Please enter a valid email address
Approval was a Success
Invalid data
An Error Occurred
Approval was partially successful, following selected items could not be processed due to error
Please enter a valid_number test