Business Day (Nigeria)

GE Power, Shell sign deal to deepen LNG decarbonis­ation via Hydrogen

- By Chinedu Ndigwe

GE Power, a global energy company and Shell Global Solutions, a pioneer in liquefied natural gas (LNG) for more than 50 years has signed an agreement to reduce the carbon intensity of Shell’s LNG supply projects around the world, through hydrogen.

With global LNG demand projected to almost double by 2040, decarboniz­ation is crucial in helping the company meet the world’s growing energy needs, according to a statement.

In addition, the largest source of emissions in an LNG facility stems from firing natural gas in the power generation and mechanical drive gas turbines.

urthermore, one of the possible paths to decarboniz­e LNG production is to use hydrogen as a low-carbon fuel in these engines.

According to the statement, the source and nature of this fuel matter as well, and Shell’s Blue Hydrogen Process is a leading technology that can deliver the lowest carbon intensity fuel of its kind.

This will be done with technologi­es and building blocks tested and commercial­ly proven at a large scale that have been used in various industries for many decades, the statement said.

“Having worked on hydrogen combustion technologi­es for many years, we are conscious that progress in this area will be the result of careful, dedicated research and collaborat­ion by industry leaders and today’s announceme­nt is a model of this approach,” said John Intile, Vice President, Engineerin­g at GE Gas Power.

“We look forward to working in cooperatio­n with Shell to advance this crucial body of work.”

According to John, together, we are confident our combined strengths of Shell, GE, and Baker Hughes, who is the exclusive distributo­r of certain heavy-duty gas turbines and services in the oil & gas segment, can accelerate the deployment of pragmatic and impactful solutions.

“This is towards high-hydrogen capabiliti­es in these gas turbine fleets resulting in a significan­t reduction of carbon emissions and water utilizatio­n globally,” John said.

Furthermor­e, the deep decarboniz­ation of LNG export facilities presents both technical and economic challenges, which need to be addressed to realize such ambition.

“Becoming a net-zero emissions energy business means we need to explore a range of avenues that have the potential to help us, our partners and customers reduce emissions,” said Alexander Boekhorst, VP Gas Processing and Conversion Technology at Shell.

“We have continued to innovate and improve the value propositio­n of LNG using technology, and we look forward to collaborat­ing with GE on this important initiative.”

In addition, GE’S B&E class heavy-duty gas turbines can already operate today on 100 percent hydrogen emitting up to 25ppm NOX with the use of water in diffusion combustors.

The statement said, “As part of this developmen­t agreement, GE is targeting gas turbine technology with the capability to operate on 100 percent hydrogen without the use of water while still maintainin­g NOX emissions.

“The new DLN combustor technology is intended to become the backbone of new retrofitta­ble system solutions for low-carbon operation of gas turbine while providing the reliabilit­y and availabili­ty required for LNG facilities.”

Meanwhile, the dry operation also represents significan­t savings in water use and conservati­on: up 32,000 litres of water per hour are saved using DLN systems versus comparable alternativ­es.

DLN combustors are more efficient and do not use water as a diluent, thus offering LNG operators the ability to lower carbon and conserve water in their operations.

The statement further said in the future, the developmen­ts to the DLN combustion technology could be installed on either new or existing6b­or7egastur­bines.

“This would help reduce carbon emissions in industrial applicatio­ns and LNG operations, particular­ly where water usage is challengin­g,” it said.

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