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CNG carrier

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Compressed natural gas (CNG) carrier ships are designed for transportation of natural gas under high pressure.[1] CNG carrier technology relies on high pressure, typically over 250 bar (2900 psi), to increase the density of the gas but 2.4 times lesser than LNG (426 kg/m3).[2] CNG carriers may find their place abreast with the well established technology of liquefied natural gas by LNG carriers as it is economical for medium distance marine transport.[3][4] Most of the energy consumed for the gas pressurisation can be recovered as electricity using turboexpander while delivering CNG to the inland piping network at unloading jetty/harbour. CNG carriers are also alternate solutions to the undersea pipelines as they have less complicated fast loading and unloading features.[3][5]

Pressure container technology

Jayanti Baruna - CNG Cargo Carrier, Indonesia[6]

Several approaches to the problem of cost-effective high-pressure containers are possible. The main variables are the material to be used and the geometry of the containers. Standard method of storing non-condensed gases in metal flasks is not cost-effective for high-volume storage at high pressure. (This does not apply to gases such as butane and propane or their mixtures as in liquefied petroleum gas (LPG). LPG gases liquefy at ambient temperatures under moderate pressure and can be economically stored in steel containers of various sizes.)

New approaches to CNG technology include fiber-reinforced plastic containers and containers in the form of metal tubes of moderate diameter (typically 6" or 168 mm internal diameter). In one approach (Coselle) 17 kilometres (11 mi) of tubing is wound on a spindle. Such spindles are stackable and may be connected to achieve the desired capacity.

Comparision

The CNG carrier is a single piece equivalent to the combination of floating liquefied natural gas, LNG carrier and floating regasification plantRU. Unlike LNG transport, CNG transport has 100% flexibility in changing gas loading / unloading port without any time lag. The capital cost of CNG transport overseas is far less than the overall capital cost needed for LNG transport.[7]

The gestation period of LNG transport infrastructure is a few years. Whereas a CNG carrier can be sourced from the available fleet. The CNG carrier is very helpful in bringing a gas field/pipeline to early production.

The propulsion fuel cost per unit natural gas transported by a CNG carrier is more than the fuel cost of a LNG carrier as CNG carrier is much heavier. CNG carrier transport is economical up to medium distances (< 2000 nmi) compared to LNG transport.[2] The economical transport range increases with fall in natural gas price.

The CNG carrier can act as storage vessel also to absorb the fluctuations in demand and production from a network of gas pipelines on daily basis and export/import natural gas on contingency basis. This would enable to discontinue with take-or-pay contracts in natural gas sales and also enable natural gas exchanges between unconnected pipeline networks.

The CNG carrier removes the dispatch bottle neck which is preventing monetising of small isolated offshore gas fields, by enabling them to produce natural gas. Also it removes the hurdle to monetise the gas reserves of small isolated offshore associated oil and gas fields, by providing storage and transport of gas which otherwise would have been flared.

CNG carrier can also be used to transport ethane either in gas/liquid form and hydrogen gas to widen its applications.

Beneficiary countries

See also

References

  1. ^ "Launch of Jayanti Baruna: World's First CNG Carrier". Retrieved 17 August 2017.
  2. ^ a b "Marine CNG Transportation" (PDF). Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  3. ^ a b "Gas carriers they have come a long way". Retrieved 17 August 2017.
  4. ^ "Compressed Natural Gas (CNG) Shipping in Indonesia" (PDF). Retrieved 17 March 2017.
  5. ^ "Undersea pipeline from Iran can bring cheaper gas to India: TNR Rao". Retrieved 17 August 2017.
  6. ^ "Jayanti Baruna (IMO 9762039)". Retrieved 17 August 2017.
  7. ^ "Marine CNG: Technically Sound, Commercially Viable, and Imminent". Retrieved 29 August 2017.