ABS Awards AIP to DSME for LCO2 Cargo Tanks

Sep 07 2022


Design allows Future Carbon Capture onboard installation

(MILAN) ABS has awarded approval in principle (AIP) to Daewoo Shipbuilding & Marine Engineering Co. Ltd. (DSME) for its design of cargo tanks on board super-large, liquefied carbon dioxide (LCO2) carriers.

The cargo tank of approximately 15,000 cbm will be mounted on a 100,000 cbm LCO2 carrier and is designed for operational efficiency in a vertical asymmetric structure to maximize the loading weight, so enough space can be provided to install liquefied natural gas (LNG) propulsion engines and carbon capture devices for future vessel designs.

“If carbon value chains are to continue to mature globally, safe and efficient carbon transport is going to prove key, as is carbon capture. This project is noteworthy for the way it not only advances CO2 transport with its introduction of significant capacity but allows for the introduction of carbon capture on board, which may prove to be a critical technology in the energy transition. ABS is proud to be able to use our insight and experience to support this project,” said Patrick Ryan, ABS Senior Vice President, Global Engineering and Technology.

"We plan to develop new materials for LCO2 carrier cargo tanks and develop new ship designs that can increase ship owners' operational efficiency, and we expect to maintain DSME's overwhelming technology in the LCO2 carrier sector, which is a major concern of the carbon capture market," said Jun-Lyoung Seo, DSME Executive Vice President and Head of Engineering and Technology Unit.

 

 



Previous: Aframax tanker in load adrift off Mauritius since Sep 2

Next: ABS verifies SHI design for Liquefied Hydrogen Carrier


Related News

Seafarer satisfaction “lowest in 8 years”

(Apr 29 2022)

From COVID to the Ukraine conflict and contractual concerns, global issues have massively impacted seafarer welfare and morale.



CSM and MHSS unite to support seafarers impacted by war in Ukraine

(Apr 21 2022)

Columbia Shipmanagement, together with its owning company and its clients, have raised an unprecedented €1.4 million and assembled a team of 320 psychologists, mostly from Ukraine, to aid traumatised families of seafarers who have been impacted by th...



Seafarer lives don’t need to be risked during lifeboat drills

(Apr 21 2022)

Seafarers are dying needlessly in lifeboat accidents when maritime legislation doesn’t actually require vessels to be manned during drills.



Body of missing crew member from exploding tanker in Thailand found

(Mar 17 2022)

The missing crew member from the “Smooth Sea 2” oil tanker, which suffered an on board explosion and fire while moored at the IRPC pier in Samut Prakan province, has been found dead, while at least 200 nearby houses have been affected.



Crew on gas tanker seek help after 13 months at sea

(Mar 10 2022)

Five crewmen of a liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) tanker were brought ashore by the navy and labour officials after one of them requested help, saying he had been 13 months at sea without shore leave.



Aug-Sept 2024

Ardmore''s safety initiatives - decarbonisation at Odfjell, Furetank, Klaveness, shore side ballast water treatment