The maiden voyage of Suiso Frontier launches a new era in marine transportation in understanding the challenges of producing, liquefying, loading, transporting and commercialising hydrogen
Departing Kobe, Japan, on Christmas Eve, Suiso Frontier, the world’s first liquefied hydrogen (LH2) carrier, completed its historic voyage, arriving at Hastings Port, Victoria, Australia, and opening a new chapter in marine transportation.
For its maiden voyage completed on 20 January, the carrier was loaded with liquefied hydrogen at the Hy touch Kobe liquefied hydrogen cargo-handling demonstration terminal.
HySTRA – the Technology Research Association for CO2-free Hydrogen Supply Chain Promotion Organisation – reports that after conducting a liquefied hydrogen cargo-handling test and various equipment inspections in Australia, the ship will be loaded with liquefied hydrogen and return to Kobe between mid and late February. The vessel can carry about 75 tonnes of LH2 in one trip.
Part of the Hydrogen Energy Supply Chain (HESC) pilot project, the ship will carry liquefied ‘blue’ hydrogen, produced from Australia’s Latrobe Valley brown coal and biomass, which will be gasified and trucked to Hastings, cooled to -253°C and liquefied. CO2 emissions produced as a by-product will be captured and collected for sequestration in the CarbonNet project’s offshore reservoir in Gippsland. Once liquefied and loaded on board, Suiso Frontier will sail some 9,000 km to Japan.
“The HESC project is key to both Australia and Japan and our hydrogen industries,” says Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison. “In addition to our government’s support for HESC, we have recently established the Australian Clean Hydrogen Trade Program and committed up to A$150M to the first round that will focus on clean hydrogen supply chains with Japan,” he adds.
The Prime Minister says the HESC project demonstrates the benefits of co-operation between the two countries, which struck the “Japan-Australia Partnership on Decarbonisation through Technology” in 2021.
“The HESC project puts Australia at the forefront of the global energy transition to lower emissions through clean hydrogen, which is a fuel of the future,” says Prime Minister Morrison.
Suiso Frontier’s successful maiden voyage triggered additional investment by Australia, which announced A$7.5M (US$5.2M) to support the next A$184M (US$128.8M) pre-commercialisation phase of HESC. Additionally, it committed A$20M (US$14M) for the next stage of development for the CarbonNet project.
This funding is contingent on additional commitments from the Victorian and Japanese Governments, as well as HESC business partners KHI, J-Power, Iwatani, Marubeni, AGL Energy and Sumitomo Corp. The Japanese part of the project is also being supported by Shell, ENEOS and K-Line.
“The HESC project is key to both Australia and Japan and our hydrogen industries”
In the commercial phase, the HESC projects expects to produce 225,000 tonnes of carbon-neutral LH2. Lessons learned from the pilot project over the next two years will provide the basis for commercialisation of the HESC project.
Australia is investing more than A$1.3Bn (US910.2M) to accelerate the development of its hydrogen industry, including A$464M (US$325M) to develop clean hydrogen industrial hubs in regional Australia, including a potential hub in the Latrobe Valley.
As the world’s largest supplier of LNG and second largest exporter of coal to Indonesia, Australia is a leading supplier of fossil fuel to Asia and Japan. However, as part of its national hydrogen strategy and to adhere to the climate goals of the Paris agreement, Japan wants to displace fossil fuel use with hydrogen in transportation, power generation, industry and other sectors to reach its ambitions of net-zero emissions by 2050.
Projects like HESC and CarbonNet are vital to Japan and the Australian economy in the global clean energy transition, and to understanding the technical, operational, safety and commercial challenges of hydrogen. Hydrogen is clean energy that does not emit CO2 when burned. The use of hydrogen is expected to expand worldwide, and efforts are being made to create a supply chain to realise a hydrogen society. Low-carbon blue hydrogen, produced for the HESC project, is seen as a valuable steppingstone to green hydrogen, which is produced with renewable power.
Preparing for the voyage
Prior to its voyage to Australia, Suiso Frontier underwent three weeks of verification testing in Japanese coastal waters. During this demonstration voyage, Suiso Frontier simulated transporting liquefied hydrogen a distance equivalent to a one-way trip between Japan and Australia. The demonstration voyage was used to acquire measurement data.
In December, ClassNK added the vessel to its register. Built by Japan’s Kawasaki Heavy Industries (KHI), Suiso Frontier has an overall length of 116 m, beam of 19 m, depth of 10.6 m, and a capacity of 1,250 m3.
The Japanese shipbuilder is a member of HySTRA.
For Suiso Frontier’s hull structure, machinery, onboard equipment, materials, etc, ClassNK completed the prescribed surveys in line with its class rules and Guidelines for Liquefied Hydrogen Carriers, describing the safety requirements based on IMO’s Interim Recommendations for Carriage of Liquefied Hydrogen in Bulk.
ClassNK will support the safe operation of Suiso Frontier through surveys in service, while using the knowledge and experience gained from the upcoming surveys to update its guidelines and develop an appropriate international standard for the safe transport of hydrogen.
“Shipbuilders, designers and class are already advancing larger LH2 carrier designs”
Shipbuilders, designers and class are already advancing larger LH2 carrier designs. In 2020, the Korean Register and Liberian Registry granted an approval in principle (AiP) for a 20,000-m3 LH2 carrier developed by South Korea’s HHI Group’s Korea Shipbuilding & Offshore Engineering (KSOE) and Hyundai Mipo Dockyard (HMD) and shipping and logistics company Hyundai Glovis.
In May, ClassNK issued an AiP to KHI for the design of a cargo-containment system with a capacity of 40,000 m3. The Japanese shipbuilder has developed a concept LH2 carrier that would be fitted with four such independent tanks, allowing for a capacity of 160,000 m3.
Expectations are rapidly growing around hydrogen’s role in the clean energy transition. Some 74% of energy professionals say that the outlook for a hydrogen economy has improved significantly in the past 12 months, according to a DNV report released in July 2021. The report, Rising to the challenge of a hydrogen economy, focuses on the outlook for emerging hydrogen value chains, from production to consumption.
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