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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1348 |
SHUN FU DA
IMO 9286580
|
82,849 | 2006 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1352 |
LINDEN ARROW
IMO 9552953
|
55,861 | 2013 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1355 |
GREAT SHANG
IMO 9766906
|
64,942 | 2016 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1354 |
G PACIFIC
IMO 9494010
|
58,114 | 2010 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1353 |
DENSA FLAMINGO
IMO 9603283
|
82,670 | 2010 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1358 |
INES CORRADO
IMO 9602772
|
81,271 | 2012 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1361 |
XIN HAI TONG 808
IMO 9669330
|
76,079 | 2010 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1357 |
AQUAHOLIC
IMO 9363089
|
83,730 | 2008 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1363 |
STAR PISCES
IMO 9715854
|
60,916 | 2015 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1362 |
ASTRO VEGA
IMO 9720299
|
63,008 | 2015 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1356 |
XIN HAI TONG 807
IMO 9624122
|
81,752 | 2013 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1359 |
XIN HAI TONG 801
IMO 9591844
|
81,680 | 2012 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1360 |
BERGE CATHERINE
IMO 9856309
|
63,654 | 2020 |
4.0
|
B |
| 1364 |
ABDULLAH
IMO 9745598
|
58,068 | 2015 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1365 |
ASIAN SUMMIT
IMO 9725005
|
62,466 | 2017 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1371 |
PSARROS D
IMO 9855642
|
81,961 | 2019 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1370 |
HF ZHOUSHAN
IMO 9268992
|
75,606 | 2004 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1372 |
ANGELIC PEACE
IMO 9250177
|
75,007 | 1999 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1369 |
STEFANOS T
IMO 9583744
|
80,499 | 2011 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1368 |
PERSEAS
IMO 9650638
|
75,033 | 2013 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1367 |
CHRISTINE OLDENDORFF
IMO 9537898
|
93,077 | 2010 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1366 |
TIGER HEBEI
IMO 9712204
|
63,483 | 2015 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1376 |
XIN HAI TONG 63
IMO 9592721
|
57,022 | 2011 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1375 |
PHILHOKUSAI
IMO 9549451
|
61,197 | 2022 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1377 |
EPIC SERENITY
IMO 9935442
|
82,310 | 2022 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1374 |
FEDERAL TOKORO
IMO 9725445
|
55,543 | 2015 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1379 |
YASA JUPITER
IMO 9848132
|
61,077 | 2019 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1378 |
TOMINI DESTINY
IMO 9718155
|
63,590 | 2017 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1373 |
HALONA
IMO 9286920
|
75,776 | 2005 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1383 |
SUN VIL II
IMO 9643178
|
56,042 | 2013 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1382 |
ZHENG RONG
IMO 9593828
|
81,793 | 2013 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1381 |
STAR ANGELINA
IMO 9310630
|
82,981 | 2006 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1380 |
JAL MURARI
IMO 9849564
|
81,993 | 2019 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1384 |
POPI S
IMO 9527233
|
80,337 | 2012 |
4.1
|
B |
| 1386 |
VIENNA
IMO 9403205
|
58,736 | 2009 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1389 |
W-SKY
IMO 9476666
|
92,929 | 2011 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1392 |
GRETKE OLDENDORFF
IMO 9681962
|
80,444 | 2015 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1388 |
BUNA ARROW
IMO 9687071
|
55,967 | 2014 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1394 |
PAN IMPERIAL
IMO 9699361
|
63,567 | 2016 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1393 |
SEVA
IMO 9336000
|
76,948 | 2007 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1387 |
ULTRA INFINITY
IMO 9767481
|
61,188 | 2016 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1385 |
WECO HOLLI
IMO 9929699
|
61,275 | 2022 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1391 |
TAHITI ONE
IMO 9597032
|
81,291 | 2012 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1390 |
AGRAFA
IMO 9947304
|
63,564 | 2024 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1400 |
TIGER LILY
IMO 9744984
|
81,886 | 2016 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1399 |
ZOITSA SIGALA
IMO 9700861
|
63,500 | 2014 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1398 |
AMANI
IMO 9729910
|
61,436 | 2016 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1397 |
STAR SANTOS
IMO 9699347
|
63,537 | 2015 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1396 |
COMMON ATLAS
IMO 9669378
|
62,985 | 2014 |
4.1
|
C |
| 1395 |
MARINA
IMO 9309497
|
87,036 | 2006 |
4.1
|
C |
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.