Plan to have vessel in service
before 2030
A group of Japanese companies is working on commercializing
vessels equipped with domestically produced ammonia-fueled engines.
NYK Line, Japan Engine Corp., IHI Power Systems and Nihon Shipyard
Co. said that Japan’s New Energy and Industrial Technology
Development Organization (NEDO) has approved their participation in
a demonstration project as part of the country’s Green Innovation
Fund project. The demonstration project, which is scheduled to begin
in December with ClassNK, aims to use ammonia as fuel to
significantly reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions during voyages
and thus introduce an ammonia-fueled vessel earlier than 2030. The
companies will eventually work toward the goal of achieving zero
emissions from ships in the future.
The companies and ClassNK’s
hope to realize the development of an ammonia-fueled vessel that is
internationally competitive ahead of other countries, and to lead
the development of safety guidelines and laws and regulations
related to ammonia-fueled vessels. In order to achieve these goals,
marine engine manufacturers, shipyards, class societies, and
shipping companies in Japan will work together to consistently
cooperate from the research and development stage to engine
development, shipbuilding, and commercialization.
With the entry into force of the Paris Agreement in 2016, the global
momentum for decarbonization is increasing. The Japanese government
has declared that it will reduce GHG emissions to zero as a whole by
2050 and aim for carbon neutrality, and the energy shift toward the
realization of a carbon-free society is accelerating. Reducing GHG
emissions is also an urgent issue in the shipping industry, and
research and development is being conducted to convert marine fuel
from conventional heavy fuel oil to liquefied natural gas (LNG) and
to popularize next-generation zero-emission fuels such as hydrogen
and ammonia. Ammonia does not emit carbon dioxide (CO2) even when
burned, so it is expected to be a next-generation fuel that
contributes to global warming countermeasures. Furthermore, it is
said that by utilizing CO2-free hydrogen** for hydrogen, which is
the raw material for ammonia, it is possible to achieve zero
emissions in consideration of the fuel life cycle.
Under this background, Japan’s
Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry started the Green Innovation
Fund project toward carbon neutrality by 2050, and NEDO has now
approved the companies’ development of vessels equipped with a
domestically produced ammonia-fueled engine as part of the Green
Innovation Fund project.
NEDO has approved these demonstration projects:
- The development and operation of an ammonia-fueled tugboat;
- The development and operation
of an ammonia-fueled ammonia gas carrier, and the companies will
carry them out.
The ammonia fuel will have a
flame retardant bottleneck, which is difficult to ignite, so this
project assumes that a small amount of fuel oil will be used as
pilot fuel. Targeting the delivery of A-Tug in FY2024, the companies
aim to reduce GHG emissions by achieving an ammonia fuel mixed
combustion rate of 80% or higher.
The companies will confirm safe operation in demonstrations aimed to
improve the mixed combustion rate with a view to achieving zero GHG
emissions by using biofuel as a pilot fuel in the future.
Targeting the ship’s delivery in 2026, the companies will develop and
operate an ammonia-fueled ammonia gas carrier (AFAGC) with the concept
of transporting ammonia as cargo and using the cargo and ammonia gas
vaporized from the cargo as fuel during the voyage.
The companies aim to reduce GHG emissions by achieving a maximum
ammonia fuel mixed combustion rate of 95% for the main engine that
moves the ship, and an ammonia fuel mixed combustion rate of 80% or
more for the auxiliary engine that runs the generator.