CMA CGM has christened the CMA CGM Osmium, a 13,000-TEU dual-fuel methanol container ship built by HD Hyundai Samho in South Korea. The carrier has assigned the vessel to the M2X service linking Asia with Mexico — a routing choice that signals CMA CGM is dispersing its alternative-fuel fleet across its network rather than concentrating it on mainline Asia-Europe trades. The pattern is deliberate.
In January, the 16,204-TEU CMA CGM Monte Cristo entered service on the BEX2 Phoenician Express connecting North Asia with the Levant and Adriatic. The Osmium is part of a 12-unit methanol series from HD Hyundai Samho — a significant yard commitment that underscores CMA CGM’s confidence in the methanol pathway even as green methanol supply and pricing remain uncertain. CMA CGM now operates 11 methanol ships out of 24 on order.
The carrier’s broader target of approximately 200 dual-fuel vessels by 2031 would cover less than a third of its current operated fleet of more than 650 ships, and that figure combines both LNG and methanol propulsion — fuels with markedly different greenhouse gas profiles given ongoing concerns over methane slip from LNG engines. The secondary-trade deployment strategy raises practical questions for the supply chain. Methanol bunkering remains concentrated at a small number of major hubs including Rotterdam, Singapore, and Shanghai, with availability beyond these ports limited and fragmented.
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