Ship-Based Carbon Capture Techno-Economic Guide

Determine operational and economic impact for carbon capture onboard your ship

This blog provides techno-economic guidance for the use of Ship-Based Carbon Capture (SBCC) onboard your vessel, including explanation on how it works, operational impact, logistics and of course the costs for implementation. All assumptions, numbers and figures are based on 11 case studies, available for download here.

  • SBCC is applicable to virtually all ship types, sizes, and fuel - LNG is cheapest

  • SBCC produces 2 m3 of CO2 per day per MW on average @ 15 bar -50 °C

  • SBCC is CAPEX dominated and costs €175k per MW or €115 per mT CO2

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Land-Based Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS)

Carbon Capture and Storage, commonly referred to as CCS, refers to the collecting and storing of carbon dioxide (CO2) from exhaust gasses before it is released into the atmosphere.

CCS technology has been in operation since 1972 in the US, where several natural gas plants in Texas have captured and stored more than 200 million tons of CO2. Existing technology can recover up to 90% of CO2 emissions from burning fossil fuels in power generation and industrial operations.

For large scale CO2 land-based capture processes, levelized cost of CO2 capture is currently estimated at approximately 60-100 €/ton CO2, based on several front-end engineering design studies on full scale plants.


Ship-Based Carbon Capture (SBCC)

The basics of ship-based carbon capture are similar to land-based processes. The largest difference is the available heat from exhaust gasses, which can be used to improve the process. In other words, CO2 from the exhaust is captured in a post-combustion capture process, which can be applied to virtually all ships sailing and for all fuels (e.g. HFO, diesel, LNG etc.). The captured CO2 is subsequently liquefied and temporarily stored on board, after which it needs to be offloaded either in port or via dedicated offloading vessels.

There is a good distribution of all kinds of different ship types, leading to the conclusion that ship type is neither a pre-requisite nor distinguishing factor in SBCC. There is a preference for LNG-fuelled vessels however, as the ‘cold’ from the LNG, coupled with generally higher exhaust temperatures, leads to improved efficiency of the heat exchanger and thus reduced cost.

Generally speaking, capture efficiency of CO2 can reach up to 90%, but depends on engine type, settings and available heat in the exhaust gas. More than 50% of all cases have a capture efficiency of 80-90%, which appears to be a good estimate of what can be achieved.


Operational impact

Case studies indicate an average production of 2 m3 CO2 per day per MW. This can be used to calculate onboard storage space requirements and offloading time by multiplying the amount of operational days by 2 per MW. Storage of CO2 onboard can be done via fixed tanks, containers or a hybrid solution, pending on the operational profile and frequency of port calls of the ship. Case studies indicate a preference to store CO2 at 15 bar and -50 °C, in supercritical phase. At higher pressures, the CAPEX of the storage tanks increases, while at lower pressures the liquefaction system becomes more expensive.


Logistics

Ship-based carbon capture can be logically divided into four main steps: storage, transport to shore, transport onshore, and utilization onshore, where utilizations includes sequestration.

Permanent storage – also called ‘sequestration’ - ensures CO2 reduction is achieved. Utilizing CO2 for land-based applications has the benefit of potential revenue for the shipowner, but is always accompanied by CO2 emissions to the atmosphere.

For feasibility purposes, the costs for transport are negligible compared to the costs for capture. More information on logistics and transportation costs can be found in the E-book.


Economics

The median levelized costs of ship-based carbon capture for all case studies considered is €115 per mT. Approximately 80% of all case studies state a levelized cost of capture above €75 and below €150 per mT.

Ship-based carbon capture costs are CAPEX dominated, i.e. equipment and refitting costs required for the capture process. CAPEX costs are estimated at €175k per MW installed power[2].

By expressing the cost of ship-based carbon capture in € per mT, the payback time can be immediately derived. In practical terms; if the levelized costs of carbon capture plus the permanent sequestration costs are less than the carbon tax a shipowner needs to pay, there is a business case9.

More information on economics can be found in the E-book.


Case studies

The information in this blog is collected from 11 case studies, which form the basis for all conclusions and recommendations. The data is collected by commingling all the case studies mentioned in all references. All information of the case studies, including all the data from these case studies, is available in the E-book. Click here to learn more.


References

SSRN - Update on post-combustion carbon capture and storage on LNG fuelled vessels

INEC - Post-combustion Carbon Capture and Storage on LNG Fuelled Ships

ScienceDirect - Advancements in SBCC technology on board of LNG-fuelled ships

MDPI - Ship-Based Carbon Capture and Storage: A Supply Chain Feasibility Study

M. Buirma - Ship Based Carbon Capture and Storage Thesis

Vopak / AV - CO2 Liquid Logistics Shipping Concept (LLSC) Overall Supply Chain Optimization

CCS Institute - Technical Readiness and Cost report

Purchase E-book for hyperlinks and PDFs of references


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