The Marseille shipowner CMA CGM will spend 1.5 billion euros over five years to decarbonize
The shipowner announces a special five-year energy fund “to accelerate the decarbonization of our activities around the world”. CMA CGM is committed to net carbon neutrality by 2050.
The shipowner CMA CGM, which made a record net profit of 14.8 billion euros in the first half, will devote 1.5 billion to an energy fund intended to “accelerate the decarbonization of its activities”, said its CEO. Rodolphe Saade at Sunday newspaper.
“We are going to have access to a special energy fund endowed with 1.5 billion euros for five years in order to accelerate the decarbonization of our activities throughout the world”, announces the boss of the 3rd world shipowner, with 580 ships. CMA CGM is committed to net carbon neutrality by 2050.
Thanks to this fund, the shipowner hopes to “accelerate the emergence of industrial-scale production units of alternative fuels”.
Developer of energy autonomy
The group which “operates 700 warehouses and around fifty port terminals” also wants to develop its energy autonomy by installing on its assets devices for “production of carbon-free energy (wind, solar, biomass, hydrogen)”, he specifies. in a press release.
CMA CGM recalled that it had joined forces with Energy Observer to develop “a prototype container ship dedicated to regional routes powered by liquid hydrogen”. The objective is to “allow carbon-free maritime transport on a larger scale, particularly over short distances”.
The group has also taken a stake in Neoline, a Nantes-based company that is working on a main-propelled cargo ship project “for 2024 on transatlantic routes”.
Rodolphe Saadé also indicated that he would participate in the green fund promoted by the government “by allocating part of (his) commitment to joint projects”.
CMA CGM, which benefited like the whole industry from the explosion in freight rates during the Covid-19 pandemic and from the logistical mess that has sent freight prices soaring since then, is among the targets. of a possible tax on “superprofits”, requested by the left opposition in France.
“I understand that the subject is put on the table”, named Rodolphe Saadé at the JDD. “But our results are not a windfall effect. They are the fruit of our past investments, which amount to billions to offer additional transport capacity to our customers”.