Stena Bulk, Alfal Laval, Deltamarin, GCMD, in new onboard carbon capture trial

Press release: The Global Centre for Maritime Decarbonisation (GCMD), the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative (OGCI) and Stena Bulk today initiated the first stage of a two-year, three-phase project to demonstrate shipboard carbon capture at scale.

Together with Alfa Laval, the American Bureau of Shipping, Deltamarin and TNO, the consortium of leading players from the energy and shipping industries will investigate onboard capture and storage, as well as offloading of captured carbon dioxide (CO2) to address the challenges and opportunities of deploying carbon capture technology on ships.

 

Although a lot of effort is going into the development of low and zero-carbon fuels, that development alone may not be fast enough to allow international shipping to meet IMO’s greenhouse gas emissions reduction targets. Projections indicate that 85% of the fuel mix for two-stroke engines will remain fossil-fuel based by 2030 and 34% by 20501. Shipboard carbon capture can help reduce GHG emissions of current vessels, with the possibility of recycling captured CO2 to produce alternative fuels.

 

Project REMARCCABLE (Realising Maritime Carbon Capture to demonstrate the Ability to Lower Emissions) is the world’s first project aimed to demonstrate end-to-end shipboard carbon capture at scale. While carbon capture technologies have been successfully used by OGCI’s member companies to reduce CO2 emissions from power plants and industrial operations, their use in the shipping industry is still in development.

 

In the largest project of its kind, targeting at least 30% absolute CO2 capture, or approximately 1000 kg/hr of capture, the seven-member consortium will build and test a marine carbon capture system onboard a Stena Bulk medium range (MR) tanker to assess the operational challenges of running such a system on a ship at sea.

 

Project REMARCCABLE will use non-proprietary equipment and processes, so results can be shared broadly and publicly to maximise learning and encourage further technology development. The project also aims to establish a pathway to reduce the cost of CO2 capture to 150 €/tCO2 or lower to allow the technology to be commercially deployed in future. An MR tanker was chosen for the project as vessels of similar size are estimated to emit 17%2 of shipping’s total CO2 emissions.

 

The initial demonstration will involve over 500 hours of capture of the exhaust from burning high-sulphur fuel oil (HSFO) or very-low sulphur fuel oil (VLSFO) and will include offloading(s) of captured and liquefied CO2 (LCO2) at ports along the route of a 10-day deep-sea voyage.

 

Following a successful test phase, Stena Bulk will retain the carbon capture system onboard and extend its use beyond this pilot. With an offtaker for the captured CO2 identified, Project REMARCCABLE will cover onboard capture and storage, as well as utilisation and/or sequestration to account for CO2 emissions reduction from ship to shore. This will make it the only pilot demonstrating shipboard carbon capture across the full value chain.

 

Professor Lynn Loo, CEO of the Global Centre for Maritime Decarbonisation, said: “GCMD views shipboard carbon capture as one of the mid-term solutions needed to help the maritime sector to decarbonise. The open sourcing of project REMARCCABLE, piloting under real-world conditions and delivering end-to-end solutions, is in line with GCMD’s goals of lowering the barriers for adoption so international shipping can meet or exceed the International Maritime Organization’s (IMO) GHG emissions reduction targets for 2030 and 2050.”

 

Erik Hånell, CEO of Stena Bulk, said: “We are proud to collaborate with GCMD, OGCI, and especially our customers, to demonstrate shipboard carbon capture on one of our vessels. Exploring this technology is crucial to understanding the role it could play in facilitating our industry’s decarbonisation. Not only does this project align with Stena Bulk’s vision to
advance decarbonisation, it is a testament to our entrepreneurial spirit and our eagerness
to lead change.”

Project REMARCCABLE: three phases

 

Project REMARCCABLE comprises three phases and is inspired by a feasibility study that
was carried out and completed by TNO on behalf of OGCI and Stena Bulk in November
2021. The first phase involves conceptual design and front-end engineering design study (FEED)
of the carbon capture system; this study is ongoing and is expected to be completed in the
first quarter of 2023.

 

Emissions estimate includes other tankers and dry bulk vessels of similar size and engine
characteristics, and is based on the Fourth IMO GHG Study.
Following the successful completion of phase one, and once consortium partners provide
their backing, a second phase encompassing the engineering, procurement, and
construction (EPC) of a prototype shipboard carbon capture system, including onshore
commissioning, will be initiated.

 

Phase three will focus on integrating the carbon capture system with the identified MR
tanker and conducting sea trials. Concurrently, GCMD will be issuing an Invitation for
Proposal (IFP) to study the challenges and address the needs to operationalise offloading of
LCO2. The findings from the offloading study will inform the pilot in phase three of Project
REMARCCABLE.

 

The transition from one to each subsequent phase of the project will be governed by a
rigorous gated review of key performance metrics.

 

Michael Traver, Head of the Transport Workstream at OGCI, said: “Building on our previous
feasibility work, this real-life project will show the potential of carbon capture technology to
meet ambitious decarbonization goals set by the maritime industry. We’re excited to bring
our knowledge from stationary applications to this hard to abate sector.”

 

The success of project REMARCCABLE has the potential to accelerate commercial
deployment of shipboard carbon capture technology within the next five years, providing
MR tankers and other vessels of similar size a mid-term solution to cut GHG emissions.

 

About the Global Centre for Maritime Decarbonisation
The Global Centre for Maritime Decarbonisation (GCMD) was set up on 1 August 2021 as a
non-profit organisation with an initial investment of S$120 million from the Maritime and
Port Authority of Singapore (MPA) and six founding partners, namely BHP, BW Group,
Eastern Pacific Shipping, Foundation Det Norske Veritas, Ocean Network Express and
Sembcorp Marine.

Strategically located in Singapore, the world’s largest bunkering hub and second largest
container port, GCMD aims to help the maritime industry eliminate GHG emissions by
shaping standards, deploying solutions, financing projects, and fostering collaboration
across sectors.

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