Maritime Intelligence Network
One Account. Two Powerful Platforms.
TrustedDocks ACTIVE New-Ships

Most Emission-Efficient General Cargos

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 2024. Lower is greener. Pick a segment and size class to see the greenest vessels first.

Segment rank (2024)
#502 of 1,190 general cargos
CO₂ intensity
9.3 g CO₂/dwt·nm
vs segment average (10.91)
-14% greener
C
1,215
vessels ranked
3.23
greenest (g CO₂/t·nm)
11.21
segment median
# Vessel Size (DWT) Built Carbon intensity — AER (g CO₂/dwt·nm) Grade
501 FISHER
IMO 9177791
12,974 1999
9.3
C
502 TRANSEUROPE
IMO 9586588
25,000 2010
9.3
C
503 CS FLOURISH
IMO 9438365
34,022 2010
9.4
C
504 BLAIR MCKEIL
IMO 9546045
14,906 2010
9.4
C
505 GAZIBEY
IMO 9121912
17,504 2005
9.4
C
506 ARKLOW WAVE
IMO 9818931
16,861 2018
9.5
C
507 XING FU SONG
IMO 9608958
27,292 2012
9.5
C
508 BC RAEDA
IMO 9487598
24,959 2011
9.5
C
509 ARKLOW WILLOW
IMO 9818955
16,861 2019
9.5
C
510 ASH ADRIATIC
IMO 9614830
10,609 2012
9.6
C
511 PATAGONMAN
IMO 9521851
18,858 2012
9.6
C
512 AAL SINGAPORE
IMO 9498365
32,134 2011
9.6
C
513 NORD LOTUS
IMO 9742390
16,963 2015
9.6
C
515 DA CUI YUN
IMO 9451329
28,341 2011
9.6
C
514 APHRODITE I
IMO 9372468
10,315 2006
9.6
C
516 BULKER BEE 10
IMO 9507087
13,784 2010
9.6
C
517 EKMEN ROYAL
IMO 9165865
10,334 2005
9.6
C
518 MU DAN SONG
IMO 9608831
27,410 2012
9.6
C
519 TOI CHALLENGER
IMO 9151515
21,146 1998
9.6
C
520 SAPIENZA
IMO 9413066
18,917 2009
9.7
C
521 ADAMAR
IMO 9515280
17,660 2009
9.7
C
522 COMPADRE
IMO 9506100
23,003 2009
9.7
C
523 YM SAMSUN
IMO 9584982
8,716 2011
9.7
C
524 TIBERBORG
IMO 9546473
21,301 2013
9.7
C
525 KING JOY
IMO 9537472
16,808 2009
9.7
C
526 ROYAL II
IMO 9355109
13,721 2007
9.7
C
527 MATTEO BR
IMO 9556844
25,000 2010
9.8
C
528 K.DADAYLI
IMO 9513191
9,293 2009
9.8
C
529 NORDIC MALMOE
IMO 9602679
35,038 2012
9.8
C
530 FWN ATLANTIC
IMO 9931472
12,575 2023
9.8
C
531 BAHRI DIRIYAH
IMO 9498482
32,241 2014
9.8
C
532 GOLDEN BIRD
IMO 8517580
12,342 1986
9.9
C
533 FRASERBORG
IMO 9419319
14,603 2011
9.9
C
534 DANILA BAGROV
IMO 9458420
28,309 2012
9.9
C
535 FENG HUANG SONG
IMO 9416757
27,299 2009
9.9
C
536 TAAGBORG
IMO 9546461
21,338 2013
10.0
C
537 FLEVOBORG
IMO 9419292
14,603 2010
10.0
C
538 CONDOR BILBAO
IMO 9473250
17,287 2012
10.0
C
539 SIYA
IMO 9442108
10,475 2007
10.1
C
540 ADAPEARL
IMO 9539432
12,440 2011
10.1
C
541 PEACE
IMO 9553983
16,817 2012
10.1
C
542 ANNETTA
IMO 9396543
11,732 2007
10.1
C
544 MIKAWA
IMO 9354208
14,078 2006
10.1
C
543 ADAROSE
IMO 9392107
12,497 2009
10.1
C
545 SIENNA
IMO 9353022
8,163 2005
10.1
C
546 ARIANNA
IMO 9406702
11,731 2007
10.1
C
547 OCEAN SKY
IMO 9354064
18,951 2006
10.2
C
548 ARKLOW WOOD
IMO 9818967
16,861 2020
10.2
C
550 BINNUR C
IMO 9261023
31,829 2003
10.2
C
549 WESER STAHL
IMO 9186687
47,257 1999
10.2
C
Page 11 of 24 — 1,190 vessels
Engine intelligence

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 2024 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.

Emission-friendly engine ranking

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.