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 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 53 |
UNITED GRACE
IMO 9870147
|
182,922 | 2019 |
2.3
|
A |
| 52 |
CAPE SUN
IMO 9953573
|
182,436 | 2023 |
2.3
|
A |
| 51 |
MAX WARRIOR
IMO 9600425
|
205,361 | 2014 |
2.3
|
A |
| 54 |
KYRA THALEIA
IMO 9375915
|
81,383 | 2009 |
2.3
|
A |
| 56 |
SHANDONG DREAM
IMO 9907952
|
207,996 | 2021 |
2.3
|
A |
| 55 |
UNITED ETERNITY
IMO 9802102
|
182,859 | 2017 |
2.3
|
A |
| 57 |
CSK GENERATION
IMO 9736949
|
182,618 | 2016 |
2.3
|
A |
| 58 |
RTM DRAKE
IMO 9591351
|
205,437 | 2013 |
2.3
|
A |
| 59 |
DODO
IMO 9336024
|
176,760 | 2006 |
2.3
|
A |
| 61 |
CAPE PEREGRINE
IMO 9500754
|
180,643 | 2012 |
2.3
|
A |
| 60 |
CAPE CAMELLIA
IMO 9531856
|
206,400 | 2013 |
2.3
|
A |
| 62 |
MINERAL KEVIN
IMO 9683271
|
180,958 | 2014 |
2.3
|
A |
| 63 |
BERGE TOWNSEND
IMO 9567063
|
175,588 | 2012 |
2.3
|
A |
| 64 |
BERGE MCCLINTOCK
IMO 9590852
|
181,458 | 2011 |
2.3
|
A |
| 65 |
CAPE DISCOVERY
IMO 9851294
|
208,603 | 2019 |
2.3
|
A |
| 66 |
TRUE CHARIOT
IMO 9726774
|
182,571 | 2015 |
2.4
|
A |
| 69 |
LEMESSOS QUEEN
IMO 9959149
|
82,751 | 2023 |
2.4
|
A |
| 68 |
GOOD HORIZON
IMO 9767089
|
182,342 | 2017 |
2.4
|
A |
| 67 |
STAR ASIA
IMO 9715490
|
181,056 | 2017 |
2.4
|
A |
| 71 |
CAPE AQUA
IMO 9538402
|
178,055 | 2009 |
2.4
|
A |
| 70 |
BERGE ISHIZUCHI
IMO 9446570
|
181,458 | 2011 |
2.4
|
A |
| 72 |
BO MAY
IMO 9980186
|
182,317 | 2025 |
2.4
|
A |
| 73 |
OU MAY
IMO 9751016
|
180,003 | 2017 |
2.4
|
A |
| 74 |
LUCY OLDENDORFF
IMO 9691553
|
181,380 | 2008 |
2.4
|
A |
| 77 |
HAUKE OLDENDORFF
IMO 9871115
|
208,000 | 2022 |
2.4
|
A |
| 76 |
PACIFIC SARAH
IMO 9835886
|
180,999 | 2019 |
2.4
|
A |
| 75 |
CAPRICORN ONE
IMO 9739018
|
181,319 | 2015 |
2.4
|
A |
| 78 |
SECRETARIAT
IMO 9699701
|
181,036 | 2015 |
2.4
|
A |
| 79 |
CAPE IRIS
IMO 9563689
|
181,403 | 2012 |
2.4
|
A |
| 80 |
APOLLONIUS
IMO 9718234
|
180,544 | 2016 |
2.4
|
A |
| 83 |
GH KAHLO
IMO 9617521
|
179,816 | 2014 |
2.4
|
A |
| 82 |
NAVIOS CORALI
IMO 9747948
|
181,088 | 2015 |
2.4
|
A |
| 81 |
BERGE HOVERLA
IMO 9497359
|
175,918 | 2010 |
2.4
|
A |
| 84 |
TOPEKA
IMO 9721671
|
179,548 | 2015 |
2.4
|
A |
| 85 |
PACIFIC MYRA
IMO 9835898
|
181,060 | 2019 |
2.5
|
A |
| 88 |
BERGE ROSA
IMO 9346378
|
180,230 | 2006 |
2.5
|
A |
| 87 |
BERGE TRIGLAV
IMO 9572666
|
175,885 | 2010 |
2.5
|
A |
| 86 |
MOUNT TROODOS
IMO 9402287
|
181,383 | 2007 |
2.5
|
A |
| 92 |
KM OSAKA
IMO 9604990
|
180,652 | 2012 |
2.5
|
A |
| 91 |
JSW SALEM
IMO 9537721
|
176,217 | 2012 |
2.5
|
A |
| 90 |
INDIAN FRIENDSHIP
IMO 9521394
|
181,125 | 2013 |
2.5
|
A |
| 89 |
SKYTHIA
IMO 9423920
|
177,830 | 2010 |
2.5
|
A |
| 97 |
STAR DRAGON
IMO 9508392
|
178,062 | 2008 |
2.5
|
A |
| 98 |
CAPE OWL
IMO 9729219
|
179,510 | 2016 |
2.5
|
A |
| 96 |
CS HANG ZHOU
IMO 9874703
|
180,000 | 2015 |
2.5
|
A |
| 93 |
CS NAN JING
IMO 9874698
|
179,668 | 2021 |
2.5
|
A |
| 95 |
NAVIOS MARS
IMO 9747950
|
181,259 | 2016 |
2.5
|
A |
| 94 |
SQUIRESHIP
IMO 9391646
|
170,000 | 2010 |
2.5
|
A |
| 99 |
CS JI NAN
IMO 9874686
|
179,606 | 2021 |
2.5
|
A |
| 100 |
BERGE KOSCIUSZKO
IMO 9682954
|
181,394 | 2014 |
2.5
|
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.