COMMERCIAL shipping is being urged to introduce sustainable plastic procurement in vessel operations through the publication of a series of guides from the Maritime Association for Clean Seas (MACS).
Oliver Kade, director of MACS said the guides are designed to support shipping companies, suppliers and other industry players with a more consistent, practical and evidence-led approach to plastic usage through sustainable procurement in line with IMO goals to curb marine plastic pollution.
“Reducing the plastic footprint of shipping is critical but there are significant barriers to overcome. These guides provide the industry with a clear framework for collaborative action to make real progress in this direction,” Mr Kade said.
The plastics initiative is led by Singapore-based ocean impact organisation Seven Clean Seas.
The publications are the outcome of MACS’ Sustainable Plastic Procurement Working Group, which brought together maritime stakeholders to explore how shipping companies can reduce unnecessary plastic use, improve procurement decisions, and send clearer signals to suppliers across the maritime value chain.
A media release from the group said this is the first in a series of MACS working groups geared to minimising plastics use across the maritime value chain by promoting best practices and collaboration in the areas of procurement and waste management to comply with the IMO Action Plan on marine litter, which requires measures to reduce plastic pollution from ships to be implemented by 2030.
It said while the IMO Action Plan on marine litter has created an important policy direction for reducing plastic pollution from ships, much of the focus to date has been on how plastics are managed once they have already entered vessel operations or become waste.
MACS’ Sustainable Plastic Procurement Working Group focused on an earlier intervention point: how to prevent unnecessary plastic from entering the maritime value chain in the first place.
“The most sustainable plastic is the plastic that is never used,” according to Mr Kade.
“But reducing plastic use in shipping is not always simple. The group found three common barriers:
The industry does not always use the same language when talking about plastic. Terms such as recyclable, recycled content, compostable and plastic-free can mean different things to different people.
Plastic alternatives are often difficult to adopt. Procurement teams need to know that any alternative is safe, affordable, available and practical to use onboard.
Shipping companies often ask suppliers for different things. This makes it harder for suppliers to invest in better products and packaging at scale.”
The new MACS guides are designed to help close these gaps by giving the industry clearer language, practical tools, and a more coordinated approach to reducing unnecessary plastic use.
The guides were informed by a series of working group meetings and a recent roundtable discussion that brought together 53 participants from 28 organisations across the global maritime value chain and included participation from MACS members and partners such as Berge Bulk, Pacific International Lines, X-Press Feeders, Bernhard Schulte Shipmanagement, DP World, PT Scorpa Pranedya, Britoil and Howden.
Among the key guides are:
Together, the publications aim to move the conversation from ambition to implementation by giving maritime companies practical resources they can use in procurement conversations, supplier engagement, internal decision-making, and future plastic reduction strategies.
The three practical guides will be open for public consultation from 16 July to 16 August 2026, giving industry stakeholders, suppliers, associations, and subject-matter experts the opportunity to provide feedback before final versions are confirmed.
MACS is inviting maritime companies, suppliers, ports, caterers, logistics providers, industry bodies, and sustainability professionals to review the guidance and contribute to the consultation process.