Green Shift

Decarbonising the Seas: Inside Shipping’s Energy Transition

40 min · 9. apr. 2026
episode Decarbonising the Seas: Inside Shipping’s Energy Transition cover

Description

Shipping moves 80–90% of the world's trade—but it's also one of the hardest industries to decarbonise. In this episode of Green Shift, David Austin and Dr. Victor Nian sit down with Riccardo Barbiellini, maritime and energy transition specialist at Bureau Veritas' Future Shipping Team. Riccardo works at the intersection of shipping, regulation, and decarbonisation, helping one of the world's most essential sectors navigate the shift to a low-carbon future. We explore: • What a sustainable ASEAN port city looks like in 2040 • The IMO's MEPC 83 meeting and why political risk is slowing investment • Ammonia as a fuel: safety, toxicity, and whether it's a real solution • Where investment is actually going right now (LNG, AI, and efficiency) • Why top-down regulation is essential for hard-to-abate sectors • Singapore's MPA grants and the "sandbox" approach to ammonia trials • Biofuels from palm oil: plug-and-play potential vs. traceability problems • Nuclear-powered commercial shipping: silver bullet or essential option? • Bureau Veritas' timeline for commercially viable SMR vessels (2040) • Floating nuclear power plants for island nations Resources mentioned in this episode: White paper on nuclear energy in shipping: https://marine-offshore.bureauveritas.com/newsroom/bureau-veritas-contributes-new-industry-white-paper-role-nuclear-energy-shipping [https://marine-offshore.bureauveritas.com/newsroom/bureau-veritas-contributes-new-industry-white-paper-role-nuclear-energy-shipping] Technical review on maritime nuclear development: https://marine-offshore.bureauveritas.com/newsroom/maritime-nuclear-development [https://marine-offshore.bureauveritas.com/newsroom/maritime-nuclear-development] Read the deeper dive: Prefer reading to listening? Each episode is turned into a rich, detailed blog post with additional analysis and context: https://greenshift.substack.com [https://greenshift.substack.com/] Follow Green Shift: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/[YOUR_CHANNEL_ID]?sub_confirmation=1 [https://www.youtube.com/channel/%5BYOUR_CHANNEL_ID%5D?sub_confirmation=1] About Green Shift: Green Shift makes sense of the energy transition—from net zero and carbon markets to nuclear, renewables, and the policies shaping our future. Hosted by David Austin and Dr. Victor Nian. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

Comments

0

Be the first to comment

Sign up now and become a member of the Green Shift community!

Get Started

2 months for 19 kr.

Then 99 kr. / month · Cancel anytime.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

All episodes

20 episodes

episode Singapore’s Nuclear Turning Point? artwork

Singapore’s Nuclear Turning Point?

⚛️ Singapore has taken a major step toward a possible nuclear future. The country is beginning the IAEA’s Integrated Nuclear Infrastructure Review (INIR) process — a critical milestone used by countries considering nuclear energy for the first time. But what does that actually mean? And why are Small Modular Reactors (SMRs) suddenly becoming part of Southeast Asia’s energy conversation? In this episode of Green Shift, David Austin speaks with Dr. Victor Nian about: ⚡ Singapore’s nuclear readiness process ⚡ The IAEA milestone approach explained simply ⚡ Why SMRs are NOT a shortcut around regulation ⚡ The 19 infrastructure requirements needed for nuclear energy ⚡ Energy security after the Ukraine War and Strait of Hormuz crisis ⚡ Why philanthropic organizations are beginning to support nuclear energy ⚡ How AI and hyperscaler data centers are changing future electricity demand ⚡ Why public engagement matters in the transition to sustainability 🎧 If you're interested in: sustainability conversations clean energy policy the future of nuclear power energy security Southeast Asia’s energy transition sustainability storytelling from Asia …this episode is for you. ⏱️ Chapters 00:00 Singapore begins the INIR process 02:26 What the IAEA milestone approach actually means 04:54 Are SMRs treated differently from traditional nuclear plants? 07:25 The 19 nuclear infrastructure requirements explained 11:18 When could Singapore reach milestone one? 12:04 The three key organizations needed for a nuclear programme 14:23 Why nuclear philanthropy is emerging globally 19:59 How foundations could shape the future of nuclear energy 20:12 AI, data centers, and rising electricity demand 22:26 Why informed public discussion matters 📩 Subscribe to Green Shift for more sustainability podcast episodes exploring clean energy, climate policy, and the transition to a sustainable economy in Asia. 💬 What do you think? Should Singapore seriously pursue nuclear energy? #sustainability #sustainabilitypodcast #nuclearenergy #SMR #energytransition #cleanenergy #singapore #southeastasia #climatechange #energypolicy ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

29. maj 202622 min
episode Oil Shock: Can Sustainability Survive? artwork

Oil Shock: Can Sustainability Survive?

The Strait of Hormuz crisis is exposing a hard truth about the global energy transition: the world is still deeply dependent on fossil fuels. In this episode of Green Shift, sustainability conversations collide with geopolitical reality as Rajiv Biswas, CEO of Asia-Pacific Economics [https://asiapacificeconomics.com/] and Dr. Victor Nian, Founding Co-chair of the Centre for Strategic Energy and Resources (CSER) [https://cser.energy/] examine how the US-Iran conflict and disruption to Middle East oil and gas supplies are reshaping Asia’s energy future. Find Asia-Pacific Economics online 🔗https://asiapacificeconomics.com/ [https://asiapacificeconomics.com/] From rising oil prices and electricity shortages to renewed coal use, nuclear energy, and the long-term future of renewables, this sustainable podcast explores the difficult trade-offs governments and businesses now face between energy security, affordability, and environmental sustainability. Topics discussed include: ⚡ The impact of the Strait of Hormuz crisis on Asia-Pacific economies ⚡ Why countries are turning back to coal despite climate goals ⚡ The growing role of nuclear power in the transition to sustainability ⚡ Whether solar imports from Australia or India make economic sense ⚡ How AI data centres are increasing electricity demand ⚡ Why energy security is now a corporate boardroom issue ⚡ The future of fossil fuels in a sustainable economy Read the CSER Policy Brief: "From Shock to Transformation: Rethinking Asia’s Energy Security PostHormuz Crisis"  [https://img1.wsimg.com/blobby/go/ca134fed-3c95-42d1-bf19-decdd72df6d1/CSER_PB10_rom%20Energy%20Crisis%20to%20System%20-7adabac.pdf] If you’re interested in sustainability storytelling, global energy markets, climate policy, or the realities of sustainable development, this episode is for you. Green Shift is a sustainability podcast exploring the struggles and successes of the global transition to sustainability, with a special focus on Asia. Subscribe for more sustainability conversations and expert analysis on energy, climate, economics, and the future of sustainable growth. #Sustainability #EnergyTransition #GreenShiftPodcast #ClimateChange #EnergySecurity #NuclearEnergy #OilCrisis #StraitOfHormuz #RenewableEnergy #Asia ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

7. maj 202638 min
episode SMRs in Southeast Asia: The Time is Now artwork

SMRs in Southeast Asia: The Time is Now

Is nuclear energy making a comeback—and could it power Southeast Asia’s sustainable future? In this episode of Green Shift, we dive into one of the most important (and controversial) topics in the global energy transition: Small Modular Reactors (SMRs). As energy demand surges—driven by AI, data centers, and economic growth—the region faces a critical question: 👉 Can nuclear be the key to a reliable, low-carbon future? In this sustainability conversation, we cover: Why the AI boom is breaking traditional energy models. The difference between conventional nuclear and "Lego-like" SMR modularity. Financing the future: Why governments need to move fast on policy. Public perception: Moving from "Not In My Backyard" to "Why Not?" Geopolitics: The risks of locking into specific vendors and fuel supplies. 🔔 Don't forget to subscribe for more sustainable storytelling and insights into the energy transition. 🎙️ Featuring: Dr. Victor Nian (CSER) Graham Beal (Corporate Finance, Infrastructure) Sanjeev Gupta (Energy Strategy & Transactions) Hosted by David Austin 📌 Timestamps: 0:00 - Panic mode: Why reliance on fossil fuels is failing 2:30 - Introducing the experts: Finance, strategy, and energy research 6:00 - What is an SMR? Victor explains modular nuclear tech 13:00 - Who is building SMRs? The global race (US, China, Europe) 19:00 - The economics: SMR vs. LNG vs. Biofuels ($/MWh breakdown) 25:00 - The "lock-in" effect: Choosing a vendor means choosing a country 31:00 - Financing SMRs: Why the "First of a Kind" needs government help 36:00 - Singapore’s luxury problem: Money vs. Space 41:00 - Public perception: Explaining that a reactor is not a bomb 46:00 - Space data centers? Elon Musk, nuclear batteries, and the future 50:00 - The fuel crunch: Will we run out of uranium? 58:00 - The Verdict: Time is running out for a 2050 deadline 🎙️ About Green Shift: We are a sustainability podcast focused on real-world solutions and the transition to sustainability. Unlike other shows, we bring together finance, technical, and regional experts to discuss what actually works. Connect with us: Subscribe on Substack; https://substack.com/@greenshift 💬 Comment below: Is nuclear the answer to AI’s energy crisis? #sustainabilitypodcast #energytransition #SMR #nuclearenergy #greenshift #sustainablepodcast #southeastasia #AIenergy #decarbonization ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

23. apr. 20261 h 10 min
episode Decarbonising the Seas: Inside Shipping’s Energy Transition artwork

Decarbonising the Seas: Inside Shipping’s Energy Transition

Shipping moves 80–90% of the world's trade—but it's also one of the hardest industries to decarbonise. In this episode of Green Shift, David Austin and Dr. Victor Nian sit down with Riccardo Barbiellini, maritime and energy transition specialist at Bureau Veritas' Future Shipping Team. Riccardo works at the intersection of shipping, regulation, and decarbonisation, helping one of the world's most essential sectors navigate the shift to a low-carbon future. We explore: • What a sustainable ASEAN port city looks like in 2040 • The IMO's MEPC 83 meeting and why political risk is slowing investment • Ammonia as a fuel: safety, toxicity, and whether it's a real solution • Where investment is actually going right now (LNG, AI, and efficiency) • Why top-down regulation is essential for hard-to-abate sectors • Singapore's MPA grants and the "sandbox" approach to ammonia trials • Biofuels from palm oil: plug-and-play potential vs. traceability problems • Nuclear-powered commercial shipping: silver bullet or essential option? • Bureau Veritas' timeline for commercially viable SMR vessels (2040) • Floating nuclear power plants for island nations Resources mentioned in this episode: White paper on nuclear energy in shipping: https://marine-offshore.bureauveritas.com/newsroom/bureau-veritas-contributes-new-industry-white-paper-role-nuclear-energy-shipping [https://marine-offshore.bureauveritas.com/newsroom/bureau-veritas-contributes-new-industry-white-paper-role-nuclear-energy-shipping] Technical review on maritime nuclear development: https://marine-offshore.bureauveritas.com/newsroom/maritime-nuclear-development [https://marine-offshore.bureauveritas.com/newsroom/maritime-nuclear-development] Read the deeper dive: Prefer reading to listening? Each episode is turned into a rich, detailed blog post with additional analysis and context: https://greenshift.substack.com [https://greenshift.substack.com/] Follow Green Shift: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/[YOUR_CHANNEL_ID]?sub_confirmation=1 [https://www.youtube.com/channel/%5BYOUR_CHANNEL_ID%5D?sub_confirmation=1] About Green Shift: Green Shift makes sense of the energy transition—from net zero and carbon markets to nuclear, renewables, and the policies shaping our future. Hosted by David Austin and Dr. Victor Nian. ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

9. apr. 202640 min
episode Carbon Without Borders: Harmonising CCS in Asia Pacific artwork

Carbon Without Borders: Harmonising CCS in Asia Pacific

Can Asia-Pacific build a cross-border carbon capture system—and make it actually work? In this episode of Green Shift, host David Austin and co-host James Balzer sit down with Kevin Pang (SVP at FutureScaleX) to unpack one of the most complex—and potentially transformative—climate solutions: Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS). From Japan’s push to export CO₂, to Southeast Asia’s vast storage potential, this conversation explores the real-world challenges of turning CCS into a regional, scalable system. 🎯 Key Topics Covered: What CCS actually is (pre-combustion, post-combustion, oxy-fuel explained simply) Why transport—not storage—is the biggest bottleneck in Asia-Pacific The geopolitics of cross-border CO₂ (Japan, Indonesia, Malaysia, Australia) The economics: can CCS ever be commercially viable? Carbon credits vs real costs—where’s the tipping point? The role of state-owned enterprises and government incentives Why ASEAN’s geography (ports + industry clusters) is a hidden advantage The governance challenge: tracking CO₂ across borders (MRV systems) CCS as a transition solution, not a permanent fix And the big idea: could CO₂ become a valuable resource instead of waste? 💡 Standout Insight: If CO₂ can be converted into products like ethylene, it could unlock real market demand—turning climate policy into economic opportunity. 🌱 Why This Matters: Asia-Pacific is at the center of global growth—and emissions. Getting CCS right here could define whether the region can balance development with decarbonisation. 🔗 Related Episodes: Check out our previous deep dive on CCS governance https://youtu.be/uH5R-8oSOW8?si=rbGnpAgd1p6O3KWz 🔗Download James' policy brief, "Diagnosing Governance Dysfunctions of CCS in Indonesia" https://img1.wsimg.com/blobby/go/ca134fed-3c95-42d1-bf19-decdd72df6d1/CSER_PB08_Diagnosing%20Governance%20Dysfunctions%20o.pdf 👍 Like, subscribe, and follow Green Shift for more conversations on the transition to a sustainable economy—through an Asia-focused lens. #CarbonCapture #CCS #Sustainability #EnergyTransition #AsiaPacific #ClimateTech #Decarbonisation ---------------------------------------- Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy [https://acast.com/privacy] for more information.

18. mar. 202634 min