Most Emission-Efficient Bulk Carriers
Ships ranked by AER (Annual Efficiency Ratio) — grams of CO₂ emitted per tonne of deadweight carried one nautical mile (g CO₂/dwt·nm), the IMO carbon-intensity metric behind the CII rating — from official EU MRV emissions data for reporting year 2025. Lower is greener. Pick a segment and size class to see the greenest vessels first.
| # | Vessel | Size (DWT) | Built | Carbon intensity — AER (g CO₂/dwt·nm) | Grade |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 |
GCL THAMES
IMO 9966221
|
182,334 | 2023 |
1.7
|
A |
| 2 |
SPRING HARMONY
IMO 9983578
|
182,498 | 2024 |
1.8
|
A |
| 3 |
HL MERCURY
IMO 9845142
|
324,993 | 2019 |
1.8
|
A |
| 4 |
HANNES OLDENDORFF
IMO 9750402
|
208,962 | 2017 |
1.8
|
A |
| 5 |
FRONTIER JASMINE
IMO 9933418
|
182,130 | 2022 |
1.9
|
A |
| 6 |
SHANDONG DEVELOPMENT
IMO 9911240
|
207,995 | 2022 |
1.9
|
A |
| 7 |
MOUNT COOK
IMO 9940344
|
208,886 | 2023 |
1.9
|
A |
| 8 |
CAPE PLEASURE
IMO 9960124
|
182,096 | 2024 |
1.9
|
A |
| 9 |
GRAND SAKURA
IMO 9913949
|
181,924 | 2021 |
2.0
|
A |
| 10 |
SAMJOHN ODYSSEY
IMO 9745940
|
209,801 | 2014 |
2.0
|
A |
| 11 |
FRONTIER HOPE
IMO 1028657
|
182,390 | 2025 |
2.0
|
A |
| 13 |
SHINWA-MARU
IMO 9325295
|
297,541 | 2008 |
2.0
|
A |
| 12 |
GLOBAL BRIGHT
IMO 9714240
|
207,562 | 2015 |
2.0
|
A |
| 15 |
SPRING CITRUS
IMO 9905215
|
182,348 | 2021 |
2.0
|
A |
| 14 |
FJ ROSSA
IMO 9921611
|
182,345 | 2022 |
2.0
|
A |
| 16 |
CAMELLIA DREAM
IMO 9568017
|
206,862 | 2014 |
2.0
|
A |
| 17 |
BERGE KUJU
IMO 9374040
|
206,312 | 2006 |
2.1
|
A |
| 18 |
CAPE OLYMPIA
IMO 9860491
|
182,882 | 2020 |
2.1
|
A |
| 20 |
CAPE CONDOR
IMO 9560390
|
180,253 | 2003 |
2.1
|
A |
| 19 |
AM TARANG
IMO 9832913
|
180,885 | 2019 |
2.1
|
A |
| 21 |
MOUNT HUA
IMO 9945655
|
207,992 | 2024 |
2.1
|
A |
| 22 |
FRONTIER WISH
IMO 1028669
|
182,454 | 2025 |
2.1
|
A |
| 23 |
TOMINI K2
IMO 9617519
|
179,816 | 2014 |
2.1
|
A |
| 24 |
NAVIOS AMETHYST
IMO 9960148
|
182,212 | 2023 |
2.1
|
A |
| 25 |
ORE AMAZONAS
IMO 9565534
|
297,978 | 2010 |
2.1
|
A |
| 28 |
DOUBLE STAR
IMO 9479228
|
206,565 | 2011 |
2.1
|
A |
| 29 |
SAIKO
IMO 9446087
|
180,178 | 2010 |
2.1
|
A |
| 27 |
MINERAL HONSHU
IMO 9614892
|
181,408 | 2012 |
2.1
|
A |
| 26 |
TOMINI K11
IMO 9860972
|
208,214 | 2020 |
2.1
|
A |
| 30 |
CAPE FALCON
IMO 9916202
|
182,066 | 2022 |
2.1
|
A |
| 31 |
GH FITZGERALD
IMO 9558218
|
180,694 | 2013 |
2.1
|
A |
| 32 |
BERGE ATLAS
IMO 9439113
|
180,180 | 2008 |
2.1
|
A |
| 33 |
ORE SALVADOR
IMO 9607045
|
297,125 | 2013 |
2.1
|
A |
| 34 |
HELGA OLDENDORFF
IMO 9713040
|
209,171 | 2016 |
2.2
|
A |
| 36 |
CAROUGE
IMO 9933080
|
182,080 | 2023 |
2.2
|
A |
| 35 |
NAVIOS ASTRA
IMO 9938614
|
182,393 | 2022 |
2.2
|
A |
| 37 |
CAPE KESTREL
IMO 9767510
|
181,267 | 2016 |
2.2
|
A |
| 38 |
OCEAN CREST
IMO 9446520
|
181,494 | 2010 |
2.2
|
A |
| 39 |
ROYAL ARGO
IMO 9860489
|
182,883 | 2020 |
2.2
|
A |
| 40 |
BERGE NIMBA
IMO 9467677
|
175,949 | 2010 |
2.2
|
A |
| 41 |
NAVIOS ARMONIA
IMO 9925813
|
182,079 | 2022 |
2.2
|
A |
| 42 |
HUBERTUS OLDENDORFF
IMO 9731602
|
209,095 | 2016 |
2.2
|
A |
| 44 |
ALICE OLDENDORFF
IMO 9942720
|
181,963 | 2022 |
2.2
|
A |
| 43 |
MILLIE
IMO 9492103
|
180,311 | 2009 |
2.2
|
A |
| 45 |
ARIADNE
IMO 9721877
|
207,520 | 2016 |
2.2
|
A |
| 49 |
BULK SANTOS
IMO 9849772
|
208,445 | 2020 |
2.2
|
A |
| 48 |
MH PHOENIX BEAUTY
IMO 9455894
|
169,151 | 2010 |
2.2
|
A |
| 46 |
SHANDONG NEW ERA
IMO 9910753
|
207,999 | 2022 |
2.2
|
A |
| 47 |
GOLDEN ASO
IMO 9701334
|
182,472 | 2015 |
2.2
|
A |
| 50 |
SENORITA
IMO 9284257
|
56,029 | 2005 |
2.2
|
A |
Which engines power the greenest fleets?
The main engine is the single largest CO₂ source on board — typically well over 80% of a ship's emissions come from propulsion. We aggregated this ranking the other way around: every engine design is scored by the measured carbon intensity of the vessels carrying it, licensee-built units merged under their design brand. The verdict from the 2025 data — modern dual-fuel designs like MAN B&W's ME-GI and WinGD's X-DF families, together with EGR/SCR-abated and ultra-long-stroke G-type engines, consistently power the most emission-friendly ships in service.
AER (Annual Efficiency Ratio) = annual CO₂ emissions ÷ (deadweight × distance sailed), the IMO carbon-intensity metric used for CII ratings. It is built only from measured CO₂, distance and deadweight — not the self-reported cargo transport-work figure, which is unreliable. Implausible outliers (top 2% per segment) are excluded. Grade A–E reflects each vessel's rank within its segment. Source: EMSA THETIS-MRV.