A shared commitment to fuel flexibility
The collaboration reflects a shared view between lomarlabs and Blaze Energy that fuel flexibility, rather than reliance on a single future fuel, will be central to maritime decarbonisation. By enabling vessels to bunker locally all available fuels – subject to storage tank availability – and convert them onboard, compact reforming technology offers a pragmatic pathway through uncertain fuel availability, infrastructure readiness, and regulatory evolution, for owners and Original Equipment Manufacturers (OEM) to manage fuel uncertainty and transition risk without premature commitment to a single future fuel propulsion solution.
Stylianos Papageorgiou, Managing Director of lomarlabs, said: “The energy transition in shipping will be non-linear, and multi-fuel for longer than we may want or expect. Technologies that create optionality, rather than betting on a single outcome, will be strategically important. Blaze Energy works to bring to market a technology that delivers optionality to owners and resolves engineering bottlenecks. Our collaboration is about giving new technology the space and support it needs to iterate, learn, and prove itself in the real world.”
Rok Sitar, CEO and co-founder of Blaze Energy, said: “This pilot marks a deliberate shift from proving technology to proving operability. By integrating Blaze Flex-fuel System with a trading vessel we are addressing one of the key bottlenecks in adopting alternative fuels: practical, safe, and flexible use in existing vessels. Collaborating with an owner of this caliber allows us to validate the system under class-relevant conditions and build a credible pathway toward broader deployment with owners, OEMs and class societies.”
Sven Schwarz, Strategic Advisor to Blaze Energy and former CEO of two leading European chemical tanker operators, adds: “For shipowners, the defining challenge is navigating regulatory uncertainty, uneven fuel availability, and long asset lifecycles at the same time. Technologies that preserve fuel optionality while working within existing engines and class frameworks are critical to de-risk compliance and long-term investment decisions.”
Nicholas Georgiou, CEO of Lomar, adds: “There are many pathways to improve and develop fuel use, but one common and essential direction: decarbonisation. This collaboration has the potential to help us transform the practical adoption of alternative fuels in commercial shipping which would be of great value to owners of vessels in the water, especially those with diesel-engines.”
Looking ahead
The pilot is scheduled for installation in early 2027, following land-based testing and engagement with classification societies. Both parties view the collaboration as a step toward developing engine-compatible, operationally credible pathways for alternative fuels—grounded in real-world testing rather than assumptions.