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Consortium Launches Brazil-Europe Green Shipping Corridor Linking Port of Açu and Antwerp-Bruges

By MGN EditorialJune 5, 2026 at 12:00 PM

A newly formed industry consortium, facilitated by the Global Maritime Forum and the Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI), is moving to establish a dedicated green shipping corridor between Brazil and Europe, connecting the Port of Açu with the Port of Antwerp-Bruges.

## Consortium Targets Brazil-Europe Green Corridor A major step forward in maritime decarbonisation has been announced with the formation of a new industry consortium aimed at establishing a green shipping corridor between the Port of Açu in Brazil and the Port of Antwerp-Bruges in Belgium, according to Splash247. The initiative is facilitated by the **Global Maritime Forum** and the **Republic of the Marshall Islands (RMI)**, and brings together a notable group of industry stakeholders including green fuels developer **HIF Global**, fuel supplier **Fuella**, and leading shipping operators **NYK Line**, **Höegh Autoliners**, and **Wallenius Wilhelmsen**. ### Strategic Significance The Brazil-Europe corridor is considered a strategically important trade lane, particularly for the automotive and roll-on/roll-off (RoRo) sectors — areas in which Höegh Autoliners and Wallenius Wilhelmsen are dominant players. The involvement of HIF Global, a prominent producer of e-fuels including green methanol and e-ammonia, signals that the corridor is likely to focus on next-generation alternative fuel deployment at scale. Green shipping corridors have emerged as one of the primary mechanisms for accelerating the adoption of zero or near-zero emission fuels in international shipping. By concentrating demand, infrastructure investment, and regulatory alignment along specific trade routes, these corridors aim to create commercially viable conditions for green fuel uptake ahead of broader market maturity. The Port of Açu, located in the state of Rio de Janeiro, has been positioning itself as a hub for energy transition projects, including offshore wind and green hydrogen production — making it a natural anchor for a corridor of this nature. Antwerp-Bruges, one of Europe's largest and most strategically significant ports, has similarly been investing heavily in alternative fuel bunkering infrastructure. ### Growing Corridor Momentum This announcement adds to a growing global network of green shipping corridor initiatives, many of which have been catalysed by the Clydebank Declaration and supported by organisations such as the Global Maritime Forum's Getting to Zero Coalition. The inclusion of both fuel producers and major vessel operators in this consortium reflects an increasingly integrated approach to corridor development, addressing both the supply and demand sides of the green fuels equation simultaneously. Further details on the consortium's governance structure, timeline, and target fuel pathways are expected to be released in the coming months.
#green shipping corridor#decarbonisation#alternative fuels#Port of Açu#Port of Antwerp-Bruges#Global Maritime Forum#Wallenius Wilhelmsen#Höegh Autoliners#NYK Line#e-fuels#RoRo#green methanol

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