ABS Prepares For Anticipated LNG Growth
· F Floating · GB Gravity Base · P Gas Processing Facility · L Liquefaction Facility · S Storage Facility · O LNG Offloading · R Re-gasification Facility
Areas of emphasis within the Guidance Notes include the terminal structure; the hull design; the mooring system; the offloading system; LNG containment systems; process facilities; and support and safety systems. The document also addresses LNG terminal installation, hook-up and commissioning; and surveys during construction and operation. Designers and operators also may consider risk-based alternatives to strict compliance with prescriptive rules.
Safety is a critical issue here, adds Sember, as industry consider taking facilities that are historically on land and putting these gas processing and cryogenic storage facilities offshore. "Although industry has successfully dealt with oil and gas processing facilities on Floating Production Storage Units for a number of years, the liquefaction and cryogenic storage of LNG offshore is a whole new arena. This transition requires a comprehensive approach toward design and review of all the elements and criteria involved in an offshore LNG terminal," said Sember.
A key issue for the floating terminal concepts, adds Sember, is designing for the relative motion between the terminal and LNG carrier during offloading operations. Whether offloading through a loading arm or some other special system for the transfer of cryogenic liquid between the terminals and the trading LNG carrier, the stresses on the transfer system are significant. "Transfer of LNG, at subzero temperatures, through a loading hose presents industry with a technological challenge for managing system stress. Industry is presently evaluating appropriate technologies, possibly even a cryogenic floating hose, to create more reliability and flexibility for the LNG transfer in a totally mobile environment," said Sember. The technology surrounding containment systems also is part of the critical evolution of offshore LNG terminals, says Todd Grove, ABS director of Offshore Project Development. Grove advises that the shipping industry has enhanced the basis of design for membrane systems, thus strengthening containment systems to handle partial loading and to sustain sloshing load once a tanker has offloaded. "An industry 'by-product' of this technology improvement," said Grove, "is advancement toward development of offshore LNG terminals, which also will require partial-loading capability in a marine environment." Traditional LNG ship-shaped containment systems are highly specialized with an elaborate aluminum insulation system, says Grove. The containment system on LNG carriers is required to minimize the heat leaking into the cargo from the surroundings and protect the ship's hull from brittle fracture, which would result if the cryogenic cargo came in contact with the steel hull. There are four types of containment systems that can be incorporated in LNG carriers: two membrane types, an independent spherical design and an independent prismatic tank design. "To date, 43 LNG carriers have been built to ABS class and have incorporated every type of containment system available," said Grove. The membrane tanks incorporate a primary and secondary membrane, separated by an insulation system and from a vessel's hull. In the event that the primary membrane fails, the secondary membrane must be able to keep the cargo away from the vessel's hull for at least 15 days to allow for emergency offloading. Independent tanks are specially designed with stress analysis and fracture mechanics studies to assure that, should a crack develop, the crack will grow so slowly that any escaped liquid will vaporize or be deflected by a spray shield to drip pans below the tank. LNG carriers building today have cargo containment systems ranging in sizes up to 145,000 cubic meters, with future designs expected to increase to 200,000 cubic meters. Designs for offshore LNG terminals currently under development are typically at least twice that size. Further, industry envisions that on some gravity-based offshore LNG terminals the containment system may be very similar to that typically employed on shore side LNG storage tanks. The ABS Guidance Notes makes appropriate reference to the relevant industry standard published by the National Fire Protection Association. Design components of an LNG containment system, says Grove, incorporate the following features: · Primary and secondary containment systems · At least two methods to determine liquid level · Flexibility to fill the tank from both the top and bottom to avoid stratification · At least one pressure gauge connected to the vapor space · Two independent overpressure protection devices · Devices for measuring liquid temperature at the top and bottom of a tank · Gas detection system Prospects on when the industry's first offshore LNG terminal will be built and installed are still uncertain, particularly in the United States, where regulatory issues regarding jurisdiction are presently being addressed. ABS is well-positioned with comprehensive documentation in place to assist industry once these regulatory matters are resolved, says Grove. "ABS is ready to go. We know the technology?both in terms of LNG and marine issues?and we have a documented plan in place to meet industry requirements in an efficient manner," said Grove.