SNAME 24 - Norfolk, Virginia - October 14-16, 2024

Herbert-ABS Booth-31

We invite you to meet us at Norfolk, Virginia's premier SNAME Maritime Convention. In lockstep with the convention's 2024 theme, “How the Future is Shaping the Maritime Industry,” we will happily discuss Emissions Reduction and upcoming Regulatory Compliance developments. SNAME is an internationally recognized society of individual members serving the maritime and offshore industries and their suppliers.

The Exhibition will be held at the Hilton Norfolk, The Main in Norfolk, Virginia, USA.

SMC 2024 Location:
Hilton Norfolk The Main
100 East Main Street
Norfolk, VA 23510

Attend SMC for technical presentations, panels, and continuing education sessions. Network with peers from all over the world. Learn about new companies and technologies by visiting our exhibitors. While at the Convention, take time to experience the Norfolk waterfront and its restaurants and shops, or visit the Hampton Roads Naval Museum/Nauticus Museum and the USS Wisconsin, BB-64.

HEC Attendees:

Eugene van Rynbach, HEC Board Chairman
Hendrik Bruhns, HEC President
Nick Delgato, Vice President, Operations Manager
Ryan, Project Naval Architect & Marine Engineer

Give us a call to meet up:

Hendrik Bruhns; ++1 5103567581

JOIN US AT SMM HAMBURG 2024 – Sept 3-6

JOIN US AT SMM Hamburg 2024 – 3 – 6 Sept -

We invite you to meet us at the SMM Hamburg. Dale Petersen, Senior Naval Architect from our European office, and Hendrik Bruhns, President of HEC, will be there and would be happy to talk to you about upcoming regulatory developments and your engineering needs. The Exhibition will be held at Hamburg Messe, Germany, from September 3 - 6, 2024.

GIVE US A CALL TO MEET UP

Contact:

Hendrik Bruhns; ++1 5103567581
Dale Pederson; ++44 7874129848 

Source:https://www.smm-hamburg.com

JOIN US AT Posidonia 2024 – Athens, Greece – June 3-7 - Metropolitan Expo

JOIN US AT Posidonia 2024 – Athens, Greece – June 3-7 - Metropolitan Expo

Panos Rusos, from HEC will attend.

“Powering ahead” is the theme for Posidonia 2024, exemplified by the impressive statistics of the Greek fleet and the growth of Posidonia itself. The 2022 event welcomed over 28,000 visitors from 103 countries, eager to do business with 1,964 exhibitors in the bustling exhibition halls. At Posidonia, exhibitors and visitors interact with the Greek shipping community, which owns the world’s largest merchant fleet. As Melina Travlos, President of the Union of Greek Shipowners, states, “It gives us a unique opportunity for face-to-face discussions and productive business with old and new colleagues from across the shipping world.”

GIVE US A CALL TO MEET UP

Contact:

Panos Roussos

 CEng MRINA, Senior Naval Architect, Project Manager

HERBERT ENGINEERING EUROPE (UK) Ltd.

Suite 8 Skyhub, 8 Elliot Place, G3 8EP, Glasgow, UK

+44 (141) 416 4776, +44 7527 436 698

proussos@herbert.com

JOIN US AT Offshore Technology Conference 2024 - NRG Park - HOUSTON, TX - MAY 6-9

Julian (Bud) Gaitley, Nourhan Elsayed, and Hendrik Bruhns from HEC will attend. Nourhan and Bud will participate on Tuesday, and Henrik Bruhns will be there from Tuesday to Thursday.

OTC offers a diverse portfolio of events that are tailored to the offshore energy industry’s unique regional and technical needs. Join us and other industry professionals from 6–9 May 2024 to share your knowledge, experience, and vision.

GIVE US A CALL TO MEET UP

Contact:

Hendrik Bruhns; ++1 5103567581

“Since 1969, the Offshore Technology Conference (OTC) has served as a central hub convening energy professionals worldwide to share ideas and innovations, discuss, debate, and build consensus around the most pressing topics facing the offshore energy sector. As the world transitions to a more sustainable and low-carbon future, no other event provides attendees diverse conversations focused on the latest developments needed to accelerate the global energy mix. Whether it's oil and gas, solar, wind, hydrogen, and other marine resources, these conversations will be centered around the innovations that could help shift and drive the world’s energy mix. “

For more info >

Herbert Briefing: MEPC 81

IMO wraps up its MEPC 81 and ISWG-GHG 16 meetings

International Maritime Organization - Marine Environment Protection Committee (MEPC)

Background

Serious progress was made on GHG issues during this session, but little was finalized.

The IMO is a 175-nation consensus organization (about 90 countries attended MEPC) with several dozen maritime industry and environmental non-voting observer non-governmental organizations (NGOs). Agreements are typically tricky and fraught with politics and special-interest pressures.

A historic agreement was reached at last year’s MEPC 80 meeting, which updated IMO’s overall GHG strategy:

To peak GHG emissions from international shipping as soon as possible and to reach net-zero GHG emissions by around 2050; to reduce CO2 emissions per transport work, as an average across international shipping, by at least 40% by 2030; to reduce the total annual GHG emissions from international shipping by at least 20%, striving for 30%, by 2030; to reduce the total annual GHG emissions from international shipping by at least 70%, aiming for 80%, by 2040, all compared to 2008.

While no substantial new agreements or final regulations were expected during this session, serious progress was made toward the GHG strategy, turning agreed-upon items into mandatory regulations and progressing the following essential issues:

LCA Framework: Work continued on the Guidelines on the life cycle GHG intensity of marine fuels (LCA Guidelines) to establish Well-to-Wake fuel factors necessary to properly consider the net GHG factors of biofuels, methanol, and onboard carbon capture. A new LCA Correspondence Group considering onboard carbon capture was established.

Mid-Term Measures: Progress was made on the two components of the major new GHG regulations: a goal-based global fuel standard and an economic mechanism to incentivize fuel transitions.

Net-Zero Framework: This is an important legal step to formulating the next round of mid-term GHG measures. The general consensus was that the upcoming GHG regulations would be included in MARPOL Annex 6, possibly as a new Chapter 5. It is crucial that the regulations be included in a more easily attained “tacit approval” mechanism of an existing convention rather than an onerous approval process of a new GHG convention.

Future Expectations

The agreed 2025 timetable for adoption in 2027 is a significant deadline. Work will continue to turn the GHG strategy into mandatory regulations; the finalization of the LSA Guidelines, including biofuels and onboard carbon capture; future phases of EEDI for new ships; the continuation of annual CII reductions beyond 2026 towards 2050 for existing ships; and adoption of the technical (global fuel standard) and economic (carbon pricing) mid-term measures. These guidelines represent a significant work program for IWSG-GHG and MEPC for the subsequent few sessions. Still, there are signs of progress, constructive proposals, and even some signs of flexibility, which will be necessary to find consensus on these complex issues.