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Wavelength Plus: A podcast by TradeWinds

Guiding Stars finalist Dola Oluteye

Each month until October, TradeWinds will publish a profile of a finalist in our Guiding Stars series, a project highlighting the people making change in shipping.


Our third Guiding Stars finalist is Dola Oluteye, a senior research fellow in energy and transport policy at University College London’s Energy Institute.

She helped represent African nations at the IMO during the 2023 deliberations to revise its greenhouse gas strategy and now leads the Leading Effective Afrocentric Participation (LEAP) project there.



TradeWinds' 10 Guiding Stars finalists have been nominated by our readers and editorial team. These are people who are innovating and creating real, tangible change in shipping and tackling some of its biggest issues. Later this year, we will ask you to vote on who will receive our TradeWinds Guiding Star award for 2026, which will be announced in November.

More episodes

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  • In conversation: Paul Taylor, chairman, Poseidon Principles

    17:50|
    The Poseidon Principles are a set of requirements for signatories, all financial institutions engaged in shipping, to collect and report climate risks of their portfolios and investments.While it does not have any regulatory teeth it has undoubtedly become a motivation for banks to look at their books.Paul Taylor, head of maritime industries at French financial giant Societe Generale, took up the post of chair of the Principles at the start of 2026, a year where maritime decarbonisation is a burning topic.In this one-to-one conversation during the TradeWinds Shipowner Forum Singapore, Paul talks to Julian Bray, TradeWinds editor-in-chief about the future of the principles, the link between them and the decarbonisation talks at the International Maritime Organization and how they could have more teeth in the near future.Read more: ‘We have to have teeth’: Poseidon Principles boss signals strategic shiftIn conversation: Paul Taylor, Head of Maritime Industries, Societe General and Julian Bray, Editor-in-chief, TradeWindsRecorded live: SIngapore April 21st 2026Producer: Craig EasonA TradeWinds/DN Media podcast
  • In conversation: Cyril Ducau

    26:57|
    In this episode of Wavelength Plus, TradeWInds editor in chief Julian Bray talks leadership strategies with Cyril Ducau, chief executive of Eastern Pacific ShippingThe recording is form the TradeWinds Shipowners Forum in Singapore on April 21st 2026 in front of a live audience of shipowners and other leading industry executivesMore details about TradeWinds leading events portfolio can be found on www.tradewinds.events Producer and introduction: Craig EasonWith Cyril Ducau, chief executive, Eastern Pacific Shipping and Julian Bray, editor in chief, TradeWindsA TradeWinds/DN Media podcast
  • In conversation: Stylianos Papageorgiou, Lomar Labs

    24:28|
    Greek/British shipowner Lomar Shipping has a fleet of about 30 ships. In 2022 it decided it wanted to look at new technologies that offer environmental or crew welfare improvements while making economic sense.It launched Lomar Labs as a project in 2022 and formalised it as a business in 2023. Lomar Shipping technical director Stylianos Papageorgiou was brought in to run the startup investor as its managing director.Lomar Labs has now invested in 12 startup companies and is offering the Lomar ships as floating test beds, with Stylianos saying more companies will soon be announced.In this episode of Wavelength Plus, Stylianos talks to TradeWinds senior editor and podcast host Craig Eason about the ethos the company has, why it does what it does, and how it assesses startups to get involved withThe full story is also available on TradeWindsnews.com
  • In conversation: realising the ammonia dream and why 2028 could be special

    21:25|
    As Carl-Antoine Saverys, chief executive of Belgium gas carrier owner Exmar headed off to South Korea to name two new ammonia-fuelled gas carriers he spoke to TradeWInds Lucy Hine about the vessels, plans for deployment, and his belief in green ammonia as a maritime fuelHe also outlines the work to make sure regulation for future fuels needs to be simple to apply and not overly complicated, and how commercial interests will shape fuel choice as much as regulationsHost: Lucy HineProducer: Craig EasonA TradeWInds/DN Media podcast
  • In conversation: how to scrap the shadow fleet and not get sanctioned

    18:10|
    The dark fleet of sanctioned vessels which transport Russian, Venezuelan and Iranian crude above a given price cap are largely old and pooröy maintained.They are due for scrapping but no cash buyer operating in US dollars wants to touch these vessels, and the reputabe yards will not either.Many yards in India have spent a lot of money in recent years to be come compliant with the standards of the Hong Kong Ship Recycling Conventionwhich is now in place, but a good shipping market has meant very little tonnage has been scrapped (owners want to keep their vessels while the sun is shippingand they can make hay). So these shadow fleet tankers are a tempting option in lean times. In this deep-dive episode of Wavelength Plus,TradeWinds' Craig Eason talks to Anil Sharma, Founder and CEO at GMS, one of the shipping industry's cash buyers of old tonnage destined for recycling. For 30 years he has been buying old ships and selling them direct to the ship recycling facilities in Alang in India and other places.Dr Sharma talks to Craig about the need to make it possible to legally sell these vessels and scrap them before they become a disaster and to prevent the shadow recycling yards taking them without doing all the safety and environmental checks expected under the HKSRC.
  • Guiding Stars finalist Scarlett Barnett-Smith on healthcare for women at sea

    11:07|
    Each month until October, TradeWinds will publish a profile of a finalist in our Guiding Stars series, a project highlighting the people making change in shipping. Our second Guiding Stars finalist is Scarlett Barnett-Smith, working deck officer and founder of The Scarlett Box. Her company has developed boxes with emergency period products for women working onboard ships, but The Scarlett Box has a wider mission to make shipping more inclusive of women to help attract and retain female talent.TradeWinds' 10 Guiding Stars finalists have been nominated by our readers and editorial team. These are people who are innovating and creating real, tangible change in shipping and tackling some of its biggest issues.Later this year, we will ask you to vote on who will receive our TradeWinds Guiding Star award for 2026, which will be announced in November.
  • Going critical 1: the story of commercial maritime nuclear

    19:46|
    Interest in using nuclear power in shipping has exploded.Whether it is on the argument that there is a need for energy security, clean power or potentially cheaper power, many countries are developing national nuclear programmes.In this first of two episodes, Craig Eason examines the latest developments by talking to start-ups developing new nuclear reactors and why they eye shipping as a market and how projects are identifying potential ship types and routes to create so-called pink corridors.The episode also begins examining how nuclear fuel be handled safely and securely.Read more about the regulatory drive: Rewriting the rules: Winning hearts and minds for a nuclear futureRead more about the project and technology developments: ‘Going critical’: Shipping takes a step closer to nuclear realityIn this episode:Emerald Nuclear chief executive, Wesley DeasonDeployable Energy Chief Executive, Bobby GallagherNorwegian professor Jan Emblemsvag (Head of SAINT nuclear centre)Greenpeace NL, Jan HaverkampRead more: ‘Going critical’: Shipping takes a step closer to nuclear realityRead more: Rewriting the rules: Winning hearts and minds for a nuclear futureHost and producer: Craig EasonA TradeWinds/DN Media podcast
  • In conversation: another side of the Odfjell family empire: making ‘beautiful wines’

    09:41|
    Before he joined the shipping business his family is known for, Laurence Odfjell worked with his father to build a unique winery in the Maipo Valley winemaking region in Chile. Odfjell Vineyards has since forged new paths in producing highly-rated, organic wines using biodynamic agriculture in a competitive winemaking country. TradeWinds paid a visit.