Methane Abatement in Maritime Innovation Initiative (MAMII)

Our Mission

You can’t tackle a problem without knowing the extent of the problem. In order to reduce methane, you need to measure it.

Safetytech Accelerator is leading the Methane Abatement in Maritime Innovation Initiative, to bring together the brightest minds to explore technologies to monitor, measure and help abate methane emissions.

While focusing on methane emissions in the maritime supply chain, we expect the efforts of MAMII to have an impact on the broader decarbonisation space.

Our Goals And Our Work

Download the First Public Report Released by MAMII

Our report delves into the Methane Abatement in Maritime Innovation Initiative (MAMII). In the last two years, we have completed a comprehensive series of analyses detailing the nature of methane emissions at every stage of the value chain.

Gain insights into the cutting-edge strategies and innovations that are setting new benchmarks for sustainability in the maritime sector.

Download Here

View Our Webinar

Advancing Methane Abatement in Maritime – Launch of MAMII’s First Public Report

This exclusive webinar was held on July 9th at 2pm BST, where we unveiled the first public report from the Methane Abatement in Maritime Innovation Initiative (MAMII), led by Safetytech Accelerator.

This comprehensive report shares key learnings and actionable recommendations to accelerate the adoption of technologies that reduce or eliminate methane emissions in the maritime sector, paving the way for a more sustainable future.

The Challenge

The need to reduce the negative effects of global climate change is becoming more urgent with each passing day. For the shipping industry, carbon neutrality is increasingly becoming a necessity due to market and regulatory demands.

At COP26, a coalition of countries incl UK & US signed a declaration committing to strengthen global efforts to reach net zero by 2050.

Merchant ships are reported to burn approx 300m metric tonnes of fossil fuels each year, emitting roughly 1bn metric tonnes of C02 in the process.

CEOs see this as a top priority according to a trade association that represents roughly 80% of the world’s merchant fleet.

Around 100 nations committed to The Global Methane Pledge – which aims to cut methane emissions by 2030, compared with 2020 levels.

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