1. Aakko-Saksa, P., Murtonen, T., Vesala, H., Koponen, P., Timonen, H., Teinilä, K., Aurela, M., Karjalainen, P., Kuittinen, N., Puustinen, H., Piimäkorpi, P., Nyyssönen, S., Martikainen, J., Kuusisto, J., Niinistö, M., Pellikka, T., Saarikoski, S., Jokela, J., Simonen, P., Mylläri, F., Wihersaari, H., Rönkkö, T., Tutuianu, M., Pirjola, L., & Malinen, A. (2017). Black carbon emissions from a ship engine in laboratory (SEA-EFFECTS BC WP1) (Report VTT-R-02075-17).
2. AMAP. (2011). The impact of black carbon on Arctic climate (P. K. Quinn, A. Stohl, A. Arneth, T. Berntsen, J. F. Burkhart, J. Christensen, M. Flanner, K. Kupiainen, H. Lihavainen, M. Shepherd, V. Shevchenko, H. Skov, & V. Vestreng, Eds.). Oslo: Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP).
3. AMAP. (2015). Black carbon and ozone as Arctic climate forcers. Oslo: Arctic Monitoring and Assessment Programme (AMAP).
4. Aplin, J. (2015). Five things the shipping industry needs to know about black carbon. Available at URL: know-about-black-carbon.
5. Azzara, A., Minjares, R. and Rutherford, D. (2015). Needs and opportunities to reduce black carbon emissions from maritime shipping. The International Council on Clean Transport (ICCT). Working Paper 2015-2. Available at URL:
https://theicct.org/sites/default/files/publications/ICCT_black-carbon-maritimeshipping_20150324.pdf