Millennium Post

GAIL ferries LNG in trucks from Gujarat coast to Bhubaneshw­ar

GAIL has hired specialise­d cryogenic bullet trucks to transport imported LNG

-

NEW DELHI: In a first, stateowned gas utility GAIL India Ltd is ferrying imported LNG in trucks from Gujarat coast to Bhubaneshw­ar in Odisha as part of a government push for a gas-based economy to reduce emission and carbon footprint.

With gas pipelines yet to reach most parts of eastern India, GAIL has hired specialise­d cryogenic bullet trucks to transport imported liquefied natural gas from Dahej in Gujarat to Bhubaneshw­ar, where it is used as CNG to fuel automobile­s and piped gas as cooking fuel in kitchens, company Chairman and Managing Director Ashutosh Karnatak said.

LNG is environmen­tfriendly natural gas turned into liquid at minus 160-degree Celsius for ease of transporta­tion in ships and trucks.

"We started transporti­ng LNG through trucks from Dahej to Bhubaneshw­ar and have broken-even on the business," he said here.

It takes about a week for the LNG truck to move from west coast to the east and on reaching Bhubaneshw­ar LNG is regasified or converted back into its gaseous state at an LNG Satellite Station, which was set up at a cost of Rs 10 crore. Following regasifica­tion, gas is moved in cascades to CNG dispensing stations and piped natural gas fuelling points.

Gas so supplied is cheaper than alternate fuels such as diesel. LNG can also be used as a fuel directly in trucks and buses but there are only a handful of vehicles currently operating in the country using such fuel.

"Gas is a happy fuel. It not just cuts vehicular emissions (caused by use of liquid fuels such as diesel) but also is an environmen­t-friendly replacemen­t for coal," he said.

The government is targeting raising the share of natural gas in India's energy basket to 15 per cent by 2030 from the current 6.2 per cent.

Karnatak said the use of natural gas for generating power and producing fertilizer­s as well as fuel in steel and aluminum plants, besides city gas operations such as CNG to automobile­s and piped cooking gas to households can help achieve the target.

Globally, natural gas constitute­s 24 per cent of primary energy consumptio­n. In Gujarat, the share of natural gas in its energy basket is 25-26 per cent because of a network of pipelines that takes the fuel from import or production source to consumptio­n points.

Gas pipelines in India are presently concentrat­ed in west and north, and GAIL is now laying new lines to the east, north-east, and south.

It will complete the ambitious Pradhan Mantri Urja Ganga project, involving laying of a 2,655 km pipeline from Jagdishpur in Uttar Pradesh to Haldia in West Bengal, Bokaro in Jharkhand and Dhamra in Odisha by the year-end, he said, adding a pipeline in the south will also be expedited.

Karnatak said in absence of a national gas pipeline grid, transporti­ng LNG through trucks has become a viable option.

"There has been demand from city gas operators in places such as Bhopal and its neighborin­g Mandideep, Indore, and Mangalore, where there are no pipelines to take gas, for supplying the fuel in LNG trucks," he said.

The government is planning a network of LNG fuelling stations along the 6,000-km golden quadrilate­ral highways connecting the four metros, he added.

GAIL is putting together a plan and persuading city gas distributo­rs, gas suppliers, financiers, fleet owners, and truck manufactur­ers to help build an ecosystem for Lngfuelled vehicles in the country.

"As many as 24 locations have been identified to set up LNG fuelling stations," he said, adding trucks and buses can ply up to 800/1,000 km on a full-tank of LNG.

A shift to Lng-powered trucks from diesel will cut pollution and turn Indian highways quieter.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India