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Ship Power Plant Decarbonisation Using Hybrid Systems and Ammonia Fuel—A Techno-Economic–Environmental Analysis

Journal of Marine Science and Engineering, ISSN: 2077-1312, Vol: 10, Issue: 11
2022
  • 14
    Citations
  • 0
    Usage
  • 34
    Captures
  • 2
    Mentions
  • 0
    Social Media
Metric Options:   Counts1 Year3 Year

Metrics Details

  • Citations
    14
    • Citation Indexes
      12
    • Policy Citations
      2
      • 2
  • Captures
    34
  • Mentions
    2
    • Blog Mentions
      1
      • 1
    • News Mentions
      1
      • 1

Most Recent Blog

JMSE, Vol. 10, Pages 1675: Ship Power Plant Decarbonisation Using Hybrid Systems and Ammonia Fuel—A Techno-Economic–Environmental Analysis

JMSE, Vol. 10, Pages 1675: Ship Power Plant Decarbonisation Using Hybrid Systems and Ammonia Fuel—A Techno-Economic–Environmental Analysis Journal of Marine Science and Engineering doi: 10.3390/jmse10111675

Most Recent News

New Marine Science and Engineering Findings from University of Strathclyde Published (Ship Power Plant Decarbonisation Using Hybrid Systems and Ammonia Fuel-A Techno-Economic-Environmental Analysis)

2022 NOV 30 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Energy Daily News -- Investigators publish new report on marine science and engineering.

Article Description

The shipping sector decarbonisation has attracted great attention due to the sector contribution to worldwide carbon emissions. This study aims at investigating the techno-economic–environmental performance of different ship power plants to identify sustainable solutions for a case study cargo ship. Four scenarios, considering conventional and hybrid power plants, the latter with installed batteries, both using marine gas oil and ammonia fuels, are analysed to estimate the pertinent lifetime key performance indicators characterising their economic and environmental performance. Additionally, taxation schemes of varying extent are considered, and a sensitivity analysis is carried out on the most uncertain input parameters, namely, fuel prices and capital cost. This study results demonstrate that the hybrid plant using ammonia exhibits the lowest environmental footprint associated with 66% carbon emission reduction, whilst increasing the lifetime cost by 40%. Taxation schemes close to 340 EUR per CO tonne are required to render it economically viable whilst meeting the IMO targets for 2050 on CO emissions reduction. The sensitivity analysis reveals that the economic parameters is highly sensitive to fuel price and the capital expenditure.

Bibliographic Details

Panagiotis Karvounis; João L. D. Dantas; Charalampos Tsoumpris; Gerasimos Theotokatos

MDPI AG

Engineering; Environmental Science

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