On 1 January 2020, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) cut the global limit on sulphur content in marine fuel from 3.50% to 0.50%. It was the biggest change to fuel buying in a generation. Six years on, compliance is the norm — but the choices operators made back then still shape their fuel bills and their port-state-control risk today. Here is where things stand in 2026.
What the Sulphur Cap Actually Requires
Under MARPOL Annex VI, ships trading internationally must use fuel oil with a sulphur content no greater than 0.50% m/m outside designated areas, and no greater than 0.10% inside Emission Control Areas (ECAs) such as the Baltic Sea, North Sea, North American and US Caribbean areas. There are two legitimate ways to comply: burn compliant fuel, or clean the exhaust.
The Three Compliance Paths in 2026
1. Compliant Fuel (VLSFO / MGO)
The most common path. Very Low Sulphur Fuel Oil (VLSFO, ≤0.50%) is the workhorse for open-sea trading; Marine Gas Oil (MGO, ≤0.10%) is used inside ECAs. No capital outlay, but the fuel costs more than the old high-sulphur product, and quality consistency must be managed with disciplined sampling.
2. Scrubbers (Exhaust Gas Cleaning Systems)
Vessels fitted with scrubbers may continue burning cheaper high-sulphur fuel oil because the system removes sulphur oxides from the exhaust. The economics depend entirely on the price spread between high- and low-sulphur fuel — wide spreads make scrubbers pay back fast, narrow spreads less so. Note that some ports and coastal states restrict open-loop scrubber discharge.
3. Alternative Fuels (LNG, Methanol, Biofuels)
Increasingly chosen for newbuilds. LNG is effectively sulphur-free and reduces CO₂; methanol and certified biofuels are growing fast as the industry looks past sulphur toward the IMO's wider greenhouse-gas strategy.
Fuel Sampling: Your Best Defence
The cap is enforced by port state control, and the consequences of a non-compliant or off-spec bunker run from fines to detention. Protect the vessel by:
- Taking MARPOL-compliant samples at every bunkering operation;
- Retaining the representative sample on board for the required period;
- Sending a sample to an independent lab and not burning the fuel until results clear it;
- Keeping the Bunker Delivery Note and quality documentation in good order.
What Has Changed Since 2020
Three things stand out in 2026: VLSFO supply and quality have stabilised; the high-/low-sulphur price spread has narrowed compared with the early scrubber-boom years, shifting the payback maths; and attention has moved decisively toward carbon intensity (CII) and the IMO's greenhouse-gas measures, meaning sulphur compliance is now table stakes rather than a competitive edge.
The Procurement Angle
Compliance and cost meet at the point of purchase. Buying compliant fuel from verified suppliers, comparing quotes against a transparent benchmark, and documenting quality is the difference between a clean voyage and a detention. The GDS platform lets operators request bunker quotes from multiple verified suppliers and keep the quality paper trail in one place.
Register your fleet on GDS to source compliant marine fuel from verified suppliers.