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Friday, February 14, 2014

World First: Offshore Shale Gas Project Planned -Maritime Executive

Posted - February 14, 2014 - Maritime Executive

An Irish shale gas entrepreneur is planning a venture to frack offshore in the UK, the BBC has reported. If successful, it would be a global first. 

Dr Chris Cornelius of Nebula Resources believes there are large volumes of offshore shale gas that could be extracted. The company has three licenses in the Irish Sea and hopes to begin exploration in the near future.



Cornelius' new firm Nebula Resources was awarded three licences in the Irish Sea last month by the Department for Energy and Climate Change and hopes to begin exploration soon.

The area covered by the Nebula licenses stretches west from Blackpool into Morecambe Bay, and is not far from the site where Cornelius’ former company Cuadrilla could drill and fracture two new onshore gas wells.

Based on existing geological data, Cornelius the offshore area could contain up to 250 trillion cubic feet, more than Cuadrilla's estimates for its onshore resources.

Fracking has been done offshore on conventional reserves, but at the scale needed to extract the offshore shale gas that Cornelius anticipates.

According to the British Geological Society, the north of England has 1300 trillion cubic feet of shale gas. This is twice as high as a recent estimate from the US's Energy Information Administration for the whole country and doesn’t include offshore shale gas resources which the society suggests may be larger.

David Cameron, the UK prime minister, recently announced that the government was going "all out" for shale gas, but the decision is controversial, with other cabinet members believing it would be at least 10 years before the country saw benefits.

Post to be found at:
http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/World-First-Offshore-Shale-Gas-Project-Planned-2014-02-13/
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Thursday, February 13, 2014

Japan's First Compliant SOx Scrubber Developed - Maritime Executive

Posted - February 12, 2014 - Maritime Executive

Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (MHI) and Mitsubishi Kakoki Kaisha (MKK) have jointly developed a hybrid SOx scrubber system that efficiently removes sulfur oxides (SOx) from exhaust gas emitted by marine diesel engines. The hybrid SOx scrubber system is the first in Japan to comply with the more stringent SOx emission regulations that will take effect in designated emission control areas (ECAs) in 2015. The system is capable of scrubbing exhaust gas from the combustion of fuels emitted from bunker heavy fuel oil to the level combusting more costly low-sulfur fuel oil. By adopting a modular design, the system also facilitates retrofit installations on ships already in service.

The Hybrid SOx Scrubber System has two scrubbing system: one that uses circulating with freshwater and the other uses one-pass flow with seawater. The freshwater system is capable of scrubbing exhaust gas from combustions of heavy fuel oil with 3.5 per cent sulfur content to that of low-sulfur fuel oil with 0.1 percent sulfur content, achieving compliance with SOx emission regulations of IMO scheduled to go into effect in ECAs in 2015. The seawater system is capable of scrubbing exhaust to a level of 0.5 per cent sulfur content fuel oil to comply with regulations that are expected to be applied in global marine areas in the future. Washing seawater is discharged outside after treatment, complying with requirements for discharged wash water.

The system includes a SOx scrubber, a container unit housing a wash water processing system and other components, and ISO standard tank containers to store sludge and a caustic soda solution (NaOH) to neutralize circulating fresh water. Modular construction enables flexible arrangement of components, reducing installation time and cost requirements, and making it easier to retrofit the system to ships already in service.

MKK has been providing flue gas scrubbing systems for desulfurization and denitration to the chemical industry in Japan since the mid-1950s. In addition, it has also developed products such as centrifugal separators for bunker fuel oil and lubrication oil for diesel engines, and pressurized fine filtration system for the chemical industry. Going forward, MHI and MKK will draw on their extensive shipbuilding and engineering expertise to aggressively promote the new high-performance SOx scrubber system for use on both newly commissioned ships and ships already in service, including ships built by other shipyards.

MHI and MKK also plan to install one of the new high-performance systems on a ship in a joint study with ClassNK, K-Line and Japan Marine United Corporation as part of ClassNK's "Joint R&D for Industry" program.

Post to be found at:
http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/Japans-first-Compliant-SOx-Scrubber-Developed-2014-02-12/
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News - Posts - nad other items of Interest

Long Beach port to test maritime emissions control system - SeeNews Shipping
 
seenews.com - The solution, dubbed Advanced Maritime Emissions Control System, was developed by US company Advanced Cleanup Technologies Inc.
 
 
MarineLink - The “Alternative Maritime Emission Control System” or “AMECS,” diverts a docked ship's emissions into an air-pollution filter-and-treatment device.
 
 
Maritime Professional (blog) - Regulating a switch to clean fuel for shipping in Hong Kong waters without a collective regional effort will put the port at even more of a disadvantage
 
 
bunkerworld  -The International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) is submitting its opinion on the monitoring and reporting of ships' carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions to the ..

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Fire-hit tanker in N.Asia shows flaws in safe-haven rules - Reuters

Posted - February 12, 2014 - By Keith Wallis - Reuters

A fire-ravaged ship loaded with hazardous chemicals has become a maritime football in the north Pacific, with Japan and South Korea unwilling to give it refuge even though they risk a wider environmental disaster if it sinks.
The plight of the Maritime Maisie, a chemical tanker which has spent seven weeks being towed in waters between the two Asian neighbours, highlights the lack of global consensus on designating ports as safe-havens for ships in distress.
The two countries are worried about the risk of a spill or environmental pollution at port, sources said.
The tanker, a 44,000 deadweight-tonne vessel the size of nearly two football fields, collided with another ship nine nautical miles off Busan, South Korea, on Dec. 29, said Ying Jinghua, fleet director of MSI Ship Management, which manages the tanker's day-to-day operation, and other shipping sources.
The accident caused a fire when a cargo tank holding the chemical acrylonitrile ruptured. The ship, owned by Aurora Tankers, part of Singapore's IMC Group, was carrying 29,337 tonnes of acrylonitrile, used to make plastics and synthetic rubber, and other chemicals, Ying and the sources said.
The 27 crew on the tanker were rescued and the ship, ablaze until Jan. 16, drifted into Japanese territorial waters before tow lines could be secured. About 20,000 tonnes of chemicals and 640 tonnes of heavy fuel oil still remain onboard the ship, two sources with knowledge of the incident said.
The Hong Kong-registered ship has been towed between South Korea and Japan since Dec. 30 amid efforts to persuade either of the countries to provide a place of refuge, where its remaining cargo could be safely offloaded to another ship.
Despite approaches by the Hong Kong government's Marine Department, salvage teams and the ship's management company, the South Korean and Japanese governments have yet to yield.
Shipping executives, including representatives from salvage company Nippon Salvage, will meet with Korean and Japanese officials in the next two days to further discuss a place of refuge for the tanker, Ying of MSI Ship Management said.
South Korea and Japan are members of the International Maritime Organisation (IMO), a United Nations body that adopted non-binding guidelines on places of refuge for ships a decade ago.
The IMO move came after a number of ships, notably in Europe, broke up and sank causing extensive pollution when countries refused to provide a safe berth.
These included the oil tanker Prestige that broke up and sank off the coast of Galicia, Spain, in November 2002, spilling 60,000 tonnes of oil and polluting almost 3,000 kilometres of coastline.
"Member states are failing to meet the spirit of their obligations," said Tim Wilkins, Asia Pacific regional manager with tanker owners lobby group INTERTANKO.
'LOCAL CONCERNS TAKE PRECEDENCE'
Hong Kong's Marine Department wrote to South Korea's Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries seeking a refuge for the ship for the second time earlier this month, said Stephen Li, Marine Department senior surveyor.
The department has yet to hear a response, while Japan has already declined to help, Li told Reuters.
The Japanese Coast Guard said they could not comment immediately.
"The Korean government is discussing how to deal with this matter and nothing has been decided," an official at the country's Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries with direct knowledge of the matter told Reuters.
The ministry told Hong Kong's Marine Department a month ago Japan was obliged to offer a suitable place to transfer cargo and fuel because the tanker drifted into Japanese territorial waters.
Once the chemicals and fuel were offloaded, the ministry said South Korea could talk about allowing the ship into Korea for repairs, the source with knowledge of the incident said.
Comité Maritime International, a Belgian umbrella group of maritime law organisations, floated proposals in 2009 to create a binding IMO convention on places of refuge.
But the UN's IMO rejected it, saying other measures - including a Nairobi convention on the removal of wrecks which comes into force in 2015 - were sufficient.
The place of refuge issue in Asia will figure prominently at a meeting next month of the Asian Shipowners' Forum, which represents Asian shipowner groups, said Arthur Bowring, managing director of the Hong Kong Shipowners' Association.
"The (IMO) guidelines are only guidelines. Local politics and concerns take precedence and it becomes difficult" to implement them, said Bowring. (Additional reporting by Meeyoung Cho in SEOUL and Osamu Tsukimori in TOKYO; Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

Post to be found at:
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/02/12/tankerrefuge-idUSL3N0I72ZU20140212
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K-Line Orders New, Environmentally-Optimized Car Carrier - gCaptain

Posted - February 12, 2014 - gCaptain - Chris Cooper and Kiyotaka Matsuda - Bloomberg

Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd., Japan’s third-largest shipping line by sales, has ordered a vessel fitted with an engine to cut nitrogen oxide emissions to meet stricter controls, said three people familiar with the situation.
k line drive green project car carrier classnk
The new vessel will be the flagship of K-Line’s “Drive Green Project”, announced in late 2013.

The Tokyo-based shipping line, also known as K-Line, will put an engine being developed by Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd. in a car carrier to be completed in January 2016, said the people, who asked not to be named before an official announcement. The engine and other changes will add about 10 percent to the cost of the ship, the three people said.
Kawasaki Kisen is also putting a device, called a scrubber, in the ship to remove sulfur oxides from exhaust gases, to meet stricter regulations from the International Maritime Organization, the United Nations’ shipping division, set to be introduced in 2015, the people said. World shipping emits about 2.7 percent of the global total of greenhouse gases, according to an IMO study.
Jitsuo Narita, a spokesman for Kawasaki Kisen, declined to comment.
Kawasaki Heavy has developed a ship engine to reduce nitrogen oxide emissions to meet IMO regulations and is working to optimize performance, the company said in a statement in May 2012. Teppei Kobayashi, a spokesman for Kawasaki Heavy, declined to comment on who would buy the engine.
Ship pollution rules are set to tighten in coming years to help reduce the emission of greenhouse gases. The IMO will limit the maximum amount of sulfur oxides emissions from ships to 0.1 percent of the fuel weight in emission control areas, according to its website. The IMO is also set to toughen rules on nitrogen oxide emissions on ships built from 2016, according to the website.
Kawasaki Kisen said in September it was ordering four new carriers to be completed in the fiscal year ending March 2016, according to the company.
The new engine will be fitted on one of those four ships, whose construction is starting before 2016, earlier than needed under the new IMO regulations, the three people said.

Post to be found at:
http://gcaptain.com/kawasaki-kisen-kaisha-car-carrier-emissions/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Gcaptain+%28gCaptain.com%29
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Wednesday, February 12, 2014

News Posts and other Items of Interest

ICS wants EU to 'hold back' on emissions monitoring
  
bunkerworld (subscription) - The International Chamber of Shipping (ICS) is submitting its views to the International Maritime Organization (IMO) on the monitoring and reporting of ..
 
Thegardenisland.com - In 2013, Kauai's ocean beaches and surfbreaks were mostly clean, but some were ... This suggests that pollution is mainly coming from river water.
 
Nature World News - Researchers from the National Ocean Service's National Centers for ... "Among the items studied were habitat types, coral cover, fish and pollution ..
 
Daily Mail (blog) - But now lawmakers are taking on the challenge in the fight against plastic pollution in oceans, lakes and rivers. Robert Sweeney, chairman of the ..

 
yahoo.com - the web page (below) provides: Effects of Ocean Pollution on Marine Life If you have ever worried about the effects of ocean pollution on marine life you ...
 
Surfline.com Surf News - A Panel Discussion on Sustainability in Action with: Jim Moriarty ... the latest surfboards designed and manufactured with sustainable 'best practices.
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Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Hong Kong working to convince Beijing on clean-fuel zone for ships in delta
 
South China Morning Post - The introduction of an emissions control zone for ocean-going vessels could be a major policy shift for China and reduce pollution in the Pearl River ..
 
 
eco-business.com - Pharrell Williams and Dutch denim label G-Star Raw have introduced a new kind of denim line 'that turns ocean plastic into something fantastic'.
 
 
South China Morning Post - But tackling roadside pollution is only half the battle, Loh admitted. Maritime pollution is one of the city's biggest causes of sulphur dioxide emissions ...
 
 
 
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