MAN Diesel & Turbo: Ready for Tier III

“We are ready for IMO Tier III,” said Dr Stephan Timmermann, MAN Diesel & Turbo executive board member responsible for marine systems and after fales. “We have the technologies in place to support our customers for this new era of environmentally efficient shipping. I am pleased that the adoption of the IMO regulations will save us from mushrooming national regulations. Now we have a clear set of rules.”

The company’s Chief Technology Officer, Dr. Hans-O. Jeske, underpinned its technological readiness: “Exhaust Gas Recirculation and Selective Catalytic Reduction are technologies we not only have available but have operational experience with,” he noted.

The Danish vessel Petunia Seaways is equipped with an MAN SCR system that has operated reliably for 9,000 hours to date, according to MAN, and follows the world’s first Tier-III-compliant, two-stroke engine that was built by Hitachi Zosen Corporation in Japan for a general cargo carrier in 2011.

Similarly, the company received its first commercial order for an EGR system, to be applied aboard a 4,500-teu Maersk Line container newbuilding. The system will be fully integrated with the vessel’s main two-stroke engine, to be built by Hyundai Heavy Industries’ engine & machinery division.

MAN has also met the Tier III challenge by introducing dual-fuel engines that can operate on clean-burning gas. The company said that its two-stroke, high-pressure ME-GI and four-stroke, 51/60DF engines were introduced successfully in 2013 and 2012 respectively and give shipowners and operators the option of using either HFO or gas, depending on emission and price parameters.

Emissions regulation will remain a key driver for maritime technology development. “For MAN Diesel & Turbo, it is important to offer a variety of solutions so that customers can best balance their needs in terms of cost efficiency, environmental efficiency and operational profile,” Jeske explained. “For decades to come, we will see a rivalry of fuels. Versatility will be key. This is why we offer highly efficient, dual-fuel, two- and four-stroke engines, emission-control equipment and highly developed propeller designs.”

Added Ole Groene, senior vice president of marketing and sales for MAN’s low speed business unit: “While fuel prices remain high and emissions become ever more stringent, ship owners look for the most efficient solutions for newbuildings and existing ships. From an environmental point of view, low-sulfur fuels such as methane, natural gas and LNG are highly relevant – all the more reason for our ME-GI engines.”

While IMO Tier III will come into force for newbuildings from 2016 onwards, already today retrofits can significantly enhance fuel efficiency for existing fleets. “Any percentage point of fuel saving means lower operational costs and lower emissions,” Groene concluded.

 
 

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