Maritime trade projections under four climate related socio-economic development scenarios 2010-2050

SCC Consortium, (2020). Maritime trade projections under four climate related socio-economic development scenarios 2010-2050. [Data Collection]. Colchester, Essex: UK Data Service. 10.5255/UKDA-SN-854235

The aim of the Shipping in Changing Climates (SCC) project is to create an enduring, multidisciplinary and independent research community strongly linked to industry and capable of informing the policy making process by developing new knowledge and understanding on the subject of the shipping system, its energy efficiency and emissions, and its transition to a low carbon, more resilient future.
It is a multi-university, multi-disciplinary consortium of leading UK academic institutions focused on addressing the interconnected research questions that arise from considering shipping's possible response over the next few decades due to changes in (i) climate (sea level rise, storm frequency), (ii) regulatory climate (mitigation and adaptation policy) and (iii) macroeconomic climate (increased trade, differing trade patterns, higher energy prices). Building on RCUK Energy programme's substantial investment in the Low Carbon Shipping and High Seas projects, this research provides crucial input into long-term strategic planning (commercial and policy) for shipping, in order to enable the sector to transition the next few decades with minimum disruption of the essential global services that it provides.
Shipping is a global industry and its challenges must therefore be considered in a global context. The project therefore concentrates on the application of global modelling and analysis for understanding the impact of a changing global climate and associated policies. This is based on three interacting research themes: (1) ship as a system (understanding the scope for greater supply side energy efficiency), (2) trade and transport demand (understanding the trends and drivers for transport demand) and (3) transitions and evolution (understanding transport supply/demand interactions).
The research undertaken is both quantitative and qualitative, applying for the first time new data and modelling techniques across the research themes.

Data description (abstract)

This data contains quantified estimations of seaborne imports and exports (2010-2050) based on four future climate policy-related trade scenarios. The scenarios anticipate volumes and patterns of future international maritime trade consistent with high and low levels of global CO2 mitigation alongside associated climate impacts and socio-economic development hypotheses. The trade scenarios cover nearly all seaborne traded commodities transported by three main vessel types (dry bulk, wet bulk, and containers) and are quantified at country and commodity levels over decadal time steps.

Data creators:
Creator Name Affiliation ORCID (as URL)
SCC Consortium SCC Consortium
Sponsors: Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Grant reference: EP/K039253/1
Topic classification: Natural environment
Transport and travel
Trade, industry and markets
Keywords: CLIMATE CHANGE, INTERNATIONAL TRADE, SHIPPING INDUSTRY, IMPORTS, EXPORTS AND IMPORTS
Project title: Shipping in Changing Climates
Grant holders: Tristan Smith, Paul Gilbert, Atilla Incecik, Richard Bucknall, Robert Nicholls, A. H. Day, Kayvan Pazouki, Alan Murphy, Andreas Schafer, Osman Turan
Project dates:
FromTo
1 December 201315 September 2017
Date published: 19 May 2020 14:29
Last modified: 08 Jun 2020 14:19

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