Wed 22 Apr 2009, 09:39 GMT

'Fuel-saving' engine gets ABS certification


Manufacturer says new engine offers average fuel savings of 9 percent.



GE Marine, a unit of GE Transportation, has announced that the American Bureau of Shipping (ABS) has type approved its new L250 engine family for ABS-classed vessel applications, which the company says is able to provide fuel savings to customers.

Introduced in September 2008, the L250 engine is US EPA Tier II certified and is said to offer average fuel savings of 9 percent when compared to the previous generation of marine engines.

“The ABS certification of the design of our new L250 engine is a milestone for GE Marine,” said John Manison, Business Leader of GE Marine. “The L250 will give our customers the opportunity to upgrade their fleets with seaworthy power that is the standard for fuel efficiency and emissions reductions.”

GE’s new L250 inline engine offers a streamlined design that is said to deliver continuous power from 1498 to 2330 kilowatts (kW). The L250 is specifically engineered for marine applications with its accessories mounted on the engine for ease of maintenance and a turbocharger that is mountable on either end of the engine for ease of installation.

Available in six- and eight-cylinder models, the engine also offers a simple re-power solution as its narrow inline footprint accommodates marine engine room constraints where space is at a premium. The footprint of the L250 is similar to competitive engines allowing minimum design change.

A multimillion-dollar investment, GE’s L250 engine has been tested at GE Transportation’s headquarter facility in Erie, Penn. The engines will be produced at the company’s state-of-the-art diesel engine manufacturing plant in Grove City, Penn.

GE designed the L250 engine based on its V250 engine platform, leveraging the same camshafts, fuel system, power assemblies, exhaust manifold, bearings, and turbocharger.

"With flexible installation and maintenance options, proven parts performance and support from GE’s worldwide distribution network, the L250 offers customers reliability and limited downtime," the company said.


Aurora Botnia vessel. Gasum and Wasaline extend bio-LNG supply agreement to 2027  

Nordic energy company renews fuel supply contract with Finnish-Swedish ferry operator through 2027.

Luminara vessel truck-to-ship bunkering. MOL Techno-Trade completes Japan’s first truck-to-ship LNG bunkering for foreign cruise vessel  

Ritz-Carlton cruise ship Luminara refuelled at Nagasaki Port using truck-to-ship method on 3 April.

NKT Eleonora vessel cable-laying. Methanol-ready cable-laying vessel hull launched in Romania  

Shipbuilder floats hull of dual-fuel vessel designed for offshore renewable energy cable operations.

Dr Prapisala Thepsithar, GCMD. GCMD biofuels lead receives Singapore standardisation award  

Dr Prapisala Thepsithar recognised for contributions to marine biofuel specification development.

Marine Energy Wales (MEW) Conference 2026 graphic. Certas Energy to attend Marine Energy Wales conference in April  

Marine fuel supplier to discuss sector solutions at UK marine renewable energy conference.

Dinamo IV vessel. Sanmar completes sea trials for 14th all-electric tugboat  

Turkish shipyard marks half-century in business with latest battery-powered vessel from ElectRA series.

Gotland Horizon X render. Echandia to supply battery system for Gotlandsbolaget’s hybrid ferry  

Swedish battery supplier wins contract for new high-speed catamaran operating between Visby and Nynäshamn.

Suezmax crude oil tanker render. Guangzhou Shipyard secures Suezmax order, delivers vessels ahead of schedule  

China State Shipbuilding subsidiary reports nine vessel deliveries in the first quarter of 2026.

Clean ammonia project pipeline chart as of March 2026. Renewable ammonia pipeline grows despite Norway project freeze  

GENA Solutions tracks 325 projects totalling 146 MMT of capacity by 2034 despite execution challenges.

Antwerpen and Arlon naming ceremony. Exmar names world’s first ocean-going ammonia dual-fuel gas carriers in South Korea  

Two 46,000-cbm vessels can reduce CO₂ emissions by up to 90% during navigation.