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Home Ports and Shipping

Port of Gothenburg achieves LNG bunkering breakthrough

byCT Report
31/10/2017
in Ports and Shipping
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WASHINGTON: The Port of Gothenburg reports the first bunkering of a ship with Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) while it was loading occurred last week. This follows close on the heels of the very first ship-to-ship bunkering of LNG at the quayside just one month ago. Bunkering of LNG has in the last few weeks alone become a regular part of operations at the Port of Gothenburg, and thanks to the application of carefully planned instructions and routines it has gathered momentum. In addition to these two events, five other ships were bunkered whilst they were at anchor just outside the port. The newly constructed bunker and distribution vessel Coralius is operating in the area, and the LNG is supplied by Skangas.  “Even 5-10 years ago the idea of ships running on liquefied natural gas would have almost been regarded as science fiction. Now we have had seven LNG-bunkerings here in less than a month. It would be no exaggeration to describe this as a major breakthrough,” said Dan-Erik Andersson, Gothenburg Port Authority Operations Manager at the Energy Port. The EU Alternative Fuels Infrastructure Directive states that it should be possible to bunker LNG at what are termed Sweden’s core ports (Luleå, Gothenburg, Stockholm, Copenhagen/Malmö and Trelleborg) before 2025. The Port of Gothenburg has already realised this ambition in full, and is the only port to do so.

According to Dan-Erik Andersson, this is the outcome of a number of key factors, coupled with effective collaboration between various companies and organisations. “This development has been driven from different directions. We have shipping companies and energy producers that have had the foresight to invest responsibly in the long term, as well as public agencies that have been compliant with regard to the regulatory framework. The Sulphur Directive introduced in 2015 has spurred us on, and at the Gothenburg Port Authority we have offered incentives in the form of fuel transition discounts and other financial inducements.” Further bunkering options on the horizon. Next year, Swedegas will build a landside pipeline for LNG at the Energy Port in Gothenburg. The investment will also mark the starting point for the construction in stages of a larger facility that will supply both the transport sector and Swedish industry with liquefied gas. LNG (Liquefied Natural Gas) is currently the cleanest marine fuel available for large-scale shipping. Emissions of sulphur dioxide and nitric oxide are a major problem, impacting on both the air and the marine environment. Use of LNG as a fuel reduces emissions of sulphur, particulates and heavy metals to a minimum, and cuts nitric oxide emissions by 80 per cent.

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