• News

Damen to convert dredge to dual fuel LNG MGO operation

Written by Nick Blenkey
image description

Trailing suction hopper dredge Samuel de Champlai

DECEMBER 14, 2017 — Rouen, France, based GIE Dragages-Ports has awarded Damen Shiprepair & Conversion a contract to convert the 117 m, 8,500 cu.m trailing suction hopper dredge Samuel de Champlain, to dual-fuel LNG and MGO operation.

The conversion is scheduled for the fall of 2018 and will be undertaken at the Damen Shiprepair Dunkerque shipyard. It will be Europe’s first of its kind. The project is part of an EU-supported initiative to promote LNG propulsion in short-sea vessels operating along the European Atlantic coast.

Under the contract, Damen is delivering a turnkey package that includes engineering, procurement and support. The current propulsion system of the Samuel de Champlain is diesel-electric burning MGO, and so the package includes the change of generators to dual-fuel models and the installation of onboard LNG storage facilities.

The vessel was built in 2002 and is the largest vessel in the GIE Dragages-Ports fleet. Based in the Grand Maritime Port of Nantes-Saint-Nazaire, the vessel divides its time between the Loire and Seine estuaries.

GIE Dragages-Ports owns, maintains and charters out a fleet of seven dredges to six key ports serving the French Atlantic coast, plus Marseille in the Mediterranean. It is 50% owned by the seven ports and 50% by the French State. Each port charters the dredges from GIE Dragages-Ports according to its needs and is responsible for operating them and supplying its own crew.

The conversion project is being made possible by a subsidy from the European Commission’s Innovation and Networks Executive Agency (INEA) via its Connecting Europe Facility programme.

To qualift for the funding, GIE Dragages-Ports formed a 12-member Franco-Spanish consortium with the aim of promoting the use of LNG by small-scale vessels active on the Atlantic coasts of Spain and France and up into the English Channel.

The conversion of the Samuel de Champlain will demonstrate the feasibility of using LNG as a fuel on smaller vessels, and allow GIE Dragages-Ports to fullfil its mission of optimizing costs via lower fuel bills and less engine maintenance, while at the same time delivering greatly reduced emissions of CO2.

“The consortium allows us to share experience with our partners and to access the support from INEA, without which this project would not have been possible,” said Jean-Pierre Guellec, CEO of GIE Dragages-Ports. “We hope that this conversion will demonstrate to other short-sea vessels the benefits of conversion to LNG and mark the first stage of the development of an LNG bunkering network on the Atlantic coast of mainland Europe.”

“At Damen Shiprepair & Conversion we believe in the fast growth of LNG as a marine fuel,” added Alexandre Richerd, Sales Manager at Damen Shiprepair & Conversion. “We are committed to sharing our expertise with our clients and supporting those who are considering retrofitting their fleet to dual fuel. This contract proves the ability of the Damen Group to offer its customers turnkey solutions for complex LNG conversions integrating engineering and procurement.”

Categories: News Tags: , , , , ,

Leave a Reply