Tue 14 Jun 2016 11:13

Ships fitted with scrubbers in Great Lakes


Installation of exhaust gas cleaning technology for second vessel is due be completed on June 20th.



Interlake Steamship Company has had its 100-foot vessel, the M/V James R. Barker, outfitted with new exhaust gas cleaning technology - also known as scrubbers - as part of its ongoing effort to cut down on emissions.

The M/V James R. Barker set sail on Sunday with the new scrubbers. The company's 826-foot ship, M/V Lee A. Tregurtha, is to have the same upgrades completed on June 20th.

The exhaust gas cleaning technology, made by DuPont, was installed on Interlake's M/V Hon. James L. Oberstar in April of 2015 by Fincantieri Bay Shipbuilding, who also handled the second phase of installation on Barker and Tregurtha.

The new scrubbers are shorter and lighter than previous iterations, while retaining all of the same emissions-reducing benefits, according to DuPont's explanation of their product.

The exhaust moves from the ship's two engines to the scrubbers which strip impurities using sprays, eliminating any contained sulphur. The particulates that remain are then removed by a droplet separator. What's left is a cloud of clean white steam. It works "like a shower", Interlake Steamship Co. fleet engineer Drew Leonardi said, who estimated the cost of the scrubber installation to be around $4 million.

Another of Interlake's ships, the M/V Masabi Miner, is planned to be updated with the same scrubbers by 2017, for a total of five. These scrubbers are part of Interlake's plan to modernize their equipment. A re-power of their ship, the S.S. Herbert C. Jackson, will be the final step of Interlake's 10-year, $100-million-dollar modernization plan.

Legislation

Effective 1 January 2015, all ships that operate in the North American and European Emission Control Areas (ECAs) have been required to switch to fuel with a sulphur content not exceeding 0.1 percent or install scrubbers that meet the equivalency standard for suphur dioxide (SO2).

As an alternative, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) has allowed shipowners to install scrubbing systems as an equivalent to fuel switching. The systems are designed to reduce the SO2 content in the engine flue gas to below that found in a 0.1 percent sulphur fuel and therefore comply with existing ECA regulations.

Image: M/V James R. Barker


LNG facility at Vestbase in Kristiansund. Molgas and NorSea Logistics reopen LNG facility in Kristiansund  

The reopened facility will supply LNG and bio-LNG to dual-fuel vessels operating in Norwegian waters.

Uyeno Transtech’s oil tanker Kikou Maru. Hydrogen-fuelled tanker achieves top rating in zero-emission programme  

Kikou Maru becomes first coastal vessel to secure financing under DBJ-ClassNK decarbonisation initiative.

TFG Marine participates in ARACON 2025 conference in Rotterdam. TFG Marine calls for ISO 22192 alignment in ARA MFM rollout  

Company urges consistency as Rotterdam and Antwerp prepare mass flow meter implementation.

Singapore skyline with Merlion and central business district. Peninsula renews $400m Singapore credit facility as part of $1.5bn funding capacity  

Bunker supplier extends banking arrangement with eight-bank syndicate, including accordion option.

Elenger Marine's LNG bunkering vessel Optimus alongside Brittany Ferries’ Saint-Malo. Titan delivers first liquefied biomethane to Saint-Malo ferry in Portsmouth  

Optimus tanker supplies Brittany Ferries' vessel with biomethane at UK port.

MOL participates in Ammonia Energy Association Annual Conference 2025. MOL outlines ammonia fuel strategy at Houston conference  

Japanese shipping company discusses terminal acquisition and dual-fuel vessel plans at industry gathering.

Gasum's LNG bunkering vessel Coralius. Gasum highlights how bio-LNG fleet generates compliance surplus  

Energy firm's four gas-powered vessels generate regulatory surplus for pooling service participants.

Monjasa Reformer bunker tanker. Monjasa secures NATO fuel supply contract across five operational areas  

Danish marine fuel supplier wins one-year framework deal with two-year extension option.

Lucia Cosulich keel-laying ceremony. Fratelli Cosulich lays keel for second methanol-ready bunker vessel  

Ceremony held to mark the beginning of the tanker's assembly phase.

GEFO's chemical tanker Gioconda. GEFO bunkers biofuel for first time as Gioconda runs on B100 UCOME  

German shipping company takes maiden step into biofuel bunkering with used cooking oil biodiesel.