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BIO / L-CNG
SUPPLY CHAIN Workshop on “Natural gas and biomethane as a fuel for transport” TEN-T days, Riga, 23 June 2015 Hany AOUAD
BBL
INTERCONNECTOR
NEL
TENP
TRANSITGAS
TAP
DUNKIRK
LNG TERMINAL
SWEDEGAS
FLUXYS: GAS INFRASTRUCTURE COMPANY
LNG
terminalling
Transmission
Storage
Present in 9 countries
Major gas transit operator
Fully independent player
2
ZEEBRUGGE
LNG TERMINAL
SOURCING LNG
ZEEBRUGGE LNG TERMINAL: 27 YEARS IN OPERATION
3
• 1,500+ LNG carriers received
• 80 million tonnes LNG unloaded = 108 bcm of natural gas
• Since comissioning in 1987 no incidents with LNG or natural gas causing a fire
ALTERNATIVE LNG SOURCE:
SMALL-SCALE LIQUEFACTION UNITS AND LBG
4
Source: Engie
UNLOCKING THE POTENTIAL OF SMALL-SCALE LNG:
DEVELOPING DOWNSTREAM REFUELING INFRASTRUCTURE
LNG trailer*
Feeder ship Bunker barge
Bunker barge
Intermediate
storage
Fluxys
LNG
terminal
LNG
L-CNG
LNG
CNG
Cutting through the chicken-and-egg
situation: Fluxys to invest with
partners in downstream LNG chain
Truck fueling
station
* Alternatives: iso-container or rail car
LNG trailer*
Feeder ship Bunker barge
Bunker barge
Intermediate
storage
Fluxys
LNG
terminal
LNG
L-CNG
LNG
CNG
Loading of LNG trailers:
since 2010
Loading of bunker barges
& feeder ships
as from 2016
Truck fueling
station
6
1st refueling station
in operation
since Oct. 2014
FLUXYS ACTIVELY SUPPORTING SMALL SCALE LNG
DEVELOPMENTS
* Alternatives: iso-container or rail car
LNG TRANSPORT BY ROAD: TRUCK LOADING SERVICE
• 18 active truck loading companies
• Capacity of 4,000 loadings/year
• Destinations: Belgium, France, The Netherlands, UK, Germany, Poland, Switzerland, Sweden, Norway, Italy
− Industrial sites without pipe gas supply
− LNG refueling stations
− LNG as fuel for shipping
7
5 65
316
819
1668
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014
Small scale LNG developments: LNG for ships 8
PORTS OF ZEEBRUGGE AND ANTWERP: FIRST TRUCK-TO-
SHIP BUNKERING OPERATIONS FROM FLUXYS TERMINAL
SUCCESSFULLY EXECUTED
9
Bunkering of first LNG-fuelled tugboat
M/T Borgøy for Norwegian BUBE
(Buksér og Berging AS)
in Port of Zeebrugge (Feb 2014)
Bunkering of Argonon (Deen Shipping)
in Port of Antwerp (Dec 2012)
Gastech 2014 04 26 10
2nd jetty under construction: commissioning 2015
Reception of LNG carriers with capacity from 2 000 to 217 000 m³ LNG (including LNG bunker carriers)
Long-term market for bunker vessel loading developing: c. 200 berthing slots already sold under long-term contracts
11
2nd jetty under construction: commissioning 2015 Maritime Structure : built by Port Authority of Zeebrugge with MBG
EPC Contract : awarded to TSLNG (TECHINT-SENER)
12
LNG bunker barges
Ship-to-ship bunkering
Refueling of remote intermediate LNG storage tanks
12
13
Intermediate storage tank from 2.000 to
30.000 m³ LNG .
Refueling of maritime / shortsea ship
& of bunker barges
Remote LNG storage tanks /
bunkering terminal in ports
Small scale LNG developments: LNG for trucks
14
CURRENT EU REGULATORY FRAMEWORK IS SUPPORTING
LNG DEVELOPMENTS IN ROAD TRANSPORT ACTIVITIES
15
LNG refueling stations in EU
Source: LNG Blue corridor project
• EU directive on “Alternative Fuel Infrastructure for transport” encouraging member states in developing action plans to speed up infrastructure deployment
• EU funded “Blue corridor” project + other private initiatives boosting the number of LNG refueling stations
• Current EU stats:
o ~40 LNG refueling stations in operations (of which ~10 opened in 2014 incl. Veurne & Kallo in BE)
o ~1500 LNG trucks on the roads
o Strongest market growth in UK, NL, Spain, and Sweden. Most projects developed in cooperation with large truck fleet owners
• France, Germany, Italy and Belgium (+ Eastern Europe) are still lagging in terms of refueling infrastructure, limiting pan-European routes for road transport
Country LNG
stations
UK 11
E 11
NL 11
SE 6
BE 2
I 1
FR 0
D 0
East. EU 0
FLUXYS’ 1ST LNG REFUELING STATION IN OPERATION
SINCE OCTOBER 2014
16
• Location: Veurne
• Partners:
CNG (Compressed natural gas)
17
(BIO-)CNG REFUELING STATION
18
Sources: US DPT Energy, Fortis BC, NGVA Europe, DATS24
Biomethane
EXPANDING NETWORK ACROSS EUROPE…
19
Source: NGVA Europe
…LEADING TO MORE NGV’S IN EUROPE?
20
21
CONCLUSIONS
• Unlocking the potential of natural gas as a fuel means developing
refueling infrastructure
> First steps were taken with strong support from TEN-T funding
> Extra support thanks to “Alternative fuel infrastructure directive”
> More infrastructure needed to develop markets
> (bio-)CNG & (bio-)LNG refueling stations
> Bunkering infrastructures for maritime transport
• Infrastructure is nothing without NGV’s (ships and trucks / cars)
> Extra efforts needed in:
> Innovation in power trains (400+ HP engine for heavy-duty trucks)
> Retrofit / new-build of LNG vessels
22