Australian hydrogen shipping start-up Provaris Energy, formerly Global Energy Ventures (GEV), has secured design approval from the class society American Bureau of Shipping (ABS) for its 26,000 cu m compressed hydrogen carrier.
In 2021, the company received ABS approvals in principle for the 26,000 cu m ship dubbed the H2Neo and the larger 120,000 cu m unit called the H2Max. The latest milestone follows the completion of one-year front-end engineering design (FEED) work and is said to be the first of its kind to receive this level of approval.
The approval confirmed the ship is capable of transporting compressed hydrogen at bulk scale at 250 bar pressure; that the FEED package allows shipbuilders to provide firm quotations for the construction; and that relevant safety aspects of the ship’s design and operation have been verified.
The next step will be to build and test a prototype hydrogen tank and prepare for ship construction with a selected shipyard. Shipbroker Clarksons has been engaged to conclude the shipyard identification and selection process in early 2023, with the aim to execute the first shipbuilding contracts for the H2Neo in late 2023 and commence large-scale hydrogen shipping in 2026.
The design of the 120,000 cu m H2Max is expected to be approved in 2023, with first orders targeted in 2026.
Tags: Carrier, Design, Hydrogen, Provaris Energy
Recent Posts
FRV Partners with Envision Energy on Green Ammonia Project in Brazil
Hamburg Trials HVO 100 Biofuel for Port Fleet as Interim Decarbonization Measure
CUMTA considers water metro linking ECR and Napier bridge
BSM unveils methanol bunkering simulator to equip seafarers for greener shipping
DPA commissions India’s first Make-In-India green hydrogen plant at Kandla
Port of Tauranga to Trial New Zealand’s First Fully Electric Straddle Carrier
OceanScore Crosses 2,300-Vessel Mark as Demand for Compliance Solutions Grows
HD Hyundai and H-Line Shipping Collaborate on AI-Powered Autonomous and Eco-Friendly Vessel Technologies