Tue 25 Mar 2014, 13:51 GMT

Chinese ship owner orders dual-fuel engine


LNG carrier is due to begin operating along the Chinese coastline in 2015.



Wärtsilä has revealed that it has received a new order for its new low-pressure, 2-stroke, dual-fuel (DF) engine.

A 5-cylinder Wärtsilä RT-flex50DF engine, together with the gas valve unit and other relevant equipment, has been ordered for a new liquefied natural gas (LNG) carrier vessel being built for the Chinese ship owner and operator, Zhejiang Huaxiang Shipping Co.Ltd.

China's Qidong Fengshun Ship Heavy Industry Co., Ltd. is building the new vessel according to the Chinese Class Society (CCS) standards. The contract was signed in March, 2014. When delivered, the 14,000-cubic-metre LNG carrier is due to operate along the Chinese coastline to serve domestic LNG transportation lines. It is scheduled for delivery in August 2015.

Wärtsilä unveiled its low-pressure, dual-fuel technology for 2-stroke engines in November of last year. The Finnish manufacturer claims that the technology is a "game-changer" for the industry.

"It offers significant both capital expenditure (CAPEX) and operating expenditure (OPEX) benefits, and in gas mode is compliant with the IMO's Tier III emission regulations without need of any exhaust gas cleaning systems. Compared to other technologies, studies show that Wärtsilä's low pressure DF engines offer capital expenditure reductions of 15-20 percent. On the OPEX side, the ability of low pressure DF engines to operate on gas at all loads, including idling and manoeuvring, substantially reduces costs," Wärtsilä said in a statement.

The new 2-stroke DF application makes the use of LNG fuel available to virtually all vessel types. The Wärtsilä RT-flex50DF engine is the first of the new series to be manufactured.

"We feel that the Wärtsilä dual-fuel engine is excellent, especially the low pressure 2-stroke DF version, which we see as being an innovation that meets the demand of the market. As owners, we are very satisfied with this engine technology and believe that it will capture a large share of the market. We look forward to seeing this technology extended to cover other cylinder bores," said Mr Cai Dejiang, General Manager of Zhejiang Huaxiang.

"This second contract for the Wärtsilä low-speed dual-fuel engines in a few months demonstrates the fast market acceptance of this 'game-changer' technology. This is the first time that Wärtsilä low-speed DF engine will power an LNG carrier. It represents a very feasible solution for this vessel class. The extension of Wärtsilä low-speed DF engine portfolio to bigger bore sizes such as the Wärtsilä X62DF and Wärtsilä X72DF engines will further expand the range of applications for the low-speed DF engine family to larger container vessels, tankers, LNG carriers and bulk carriers," commented Mr Martin Wernli, Vice President 2-stroke, Wärtsilä Ship Power.

Wärtsilä's low pressure LNG concept is a lean burning Otto-cycle gas engine that has additional liquid fuel back-up capability, thereby enabling vessels to operate 100 percent on LNG. This is in contrast to other systems utilising a high-pressure concept, which is a conventional diesel engine able to burn gas under certain conditions. Among other benefits, Wärtsilä says the concept offers simplicity, reliability, and the most economic gas supply system with the least number of components.

Zhejiang Huaxiang specializes in the safe transportation of LNG, and is one of the only two companies who have the Business Certificate of LNG transportation in coastal China issued by the Ministry of Transport of the People's Republic of China.

The Wärtsilä low-pressure 2-stroke dual-fuel engine technology

In addition to CAPEX and OPEX benefits, the new Wärtsilä low-pressure 2-stroke dual-fuel engine technology is said to offer other competitive benefits. Most importantly, no investment is needed for exhaust gas cleaning systems in order to comply with the IMO's Tier III environmental regulations.

Wärtsilä points out that another advantage of the Wärtsilä low pressure DF technology is that it allows stable operation on gas across the entire load range. This means that at low loads (below 15 per cent), there is no need to switch to diesel fuel.

The engine uses a low pressure gas handling system with a maximum 16 bar pressure. LNG and air are mixed in the cylinder prior to compression and, therefore, no additional external engine compressors are needed and additional parasitic load is avoided. Moreover, the consumption of pilot fuel is approximately just one percent of the total energy at full load, and therefore the lowest for any low speed 2-stroke engine technology, Wärtsilä says.

Wärtsilä introduced its third generation of Wärtsilä's 4-stroke DF engines in 1995. These engines combine fuel flexibility, environmental benefits, and high efficiency and reliability with low capital cost. Thus far more than 1000 Wärtsilä DF engines have been sold for both marine and land-based applications, accumulating more than 10 million running hours.


Hapag-Lloyd and DSV logo side by side. Hapag-Lloyd and DSV sign 18,000-tonne CO2e reduction agreement for sustainable marine fuels  

Two-year framework allows inclusion of alternative fuels beyond biofuels in shipping decarbonisation partnership.

Bangkok city skyline. Uni-Fuels opens Thailand office as part of Southeast Asia expansion  

Marine fuel supplier establishes Bangkok entity, appoints managing director with 15 years’ industry experience.

Washington State Hybrid-Electric 160-Auto Ferry vessel render. Corvus Energy to supply battery systems for Washington State Ferries hybrid vessels  

ABB selects Corvus for two new 160-vehicle ferries as part of $3.98bn electrification plan.

Vinssen and Mana Engineering sign MoU. Vinssen, Mana Engineering partner on hydrogen fuel cell retrofit for 800-teu feeder vessel  

South Korean and Dutch firms to pursue Lloyd’s Register approval for hybrid retrofit concept.

Hercules Elisabeth vessel. Hercules Tanker Management takes delivery of second Ultra-Spec vessel in China  

Hercules Elisabeth is the second of 10 hybrid-ready tankers designed for alternative fuels.

Wolf 1 vessel. Petrol Ofisi launches fuel supply tanker Wolf 1  

Turkish bunker supplier adds 1,750-dwt vessel with alternative fuel infrastructure to fleet.

BIMCO meeting. BIMCO to convene for adoption of biofuel clause and ETS provisions at February meeting  

Documentary Committee to consider new contractual frameworks for alternative fuels and emission trading scheme compliance.

Sea Change II vessel render. Incat Crowther and Switch Maritime develop 150-passenger hydrogen ferry for New York  

Design work begins on 28-metre vessel with 720 kg hydrogen capacity and 25-knot speed.

Aerial view of a container vessel. HIF Global signs heads of agreement with German eFuel One for 100,000 tonnes of e-methanol annually  

Deal covers supply from HIF’s Uruguay project, with e-methanol meeting EU RED III standards.

Welcoming of Kota Odyssey at Jordan’s Aqaba Container Terminal. PIL’s LNG-powered vessel makes maiden call at Jordan’s Aqaba port  

Kota Odyssey is Pacific International Lines’ first LNG-fuelled ship to call at the Red Sea port.