HD Hyundai develops S.Korea's first offshore supply base for ammonia
The company built a floating facility for the green fuel with a public gas company and got an initial OK from Lloyd’s Register
By Apr 19, 2023 (Gmt+09:00)
Samsung steps up AR race with advanced microdisplay for smart glasses


When in S. Korea, it’s a ritual: Foreigners make stops at CU, GS25, 7-Eleven


Maybe Happy Ending: A robot love story that rewrote Broadway playbook


NPS yet to schedule external manager selection; PE firms’ fundraising woes deepen


US auto parts tariffs take effect; Korea avoids heavy hit



HD Hyundai Co., the largest shipbuilding conglomerate in South Korea on Wednesday said it developed for the first time in the country a vessel for supplying the future eco-friendly energy source ammonia from sea to land.
The vessel stores liquefied ammonia transported from the production area, re-gasifies it and supplies it to clients on land.
An FSRU is generally run similarly to a land terminal in approaching coastal mooring facilities but is cheaper to dry and has a shorter production period. Another advantage is the lack of need for a large site.
Ammonia's role in the storage and transportation of hydrogen is attracting major interest.
The substance is a compound of hydrogen and nitrogen whose liquefication temperature is minus 33 degrees Celsius, far higher than hydrogen's minus 253 degrees. When liquefied, ammonia has a hydrogen storage density 70% higher than that of liquefied hydrogen of the same volume, making it suitable for large-scale and long-distance transportation.
In addition, ammonia is an eco-friendly fuel that emits no carbon dioxide during combustion and cuts CO2 emissions when mixed with coal while maintaining power generation capacity.
To achieve its Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) to carbon neutrality by 2030, the country is promoting power generation by using 20% ammonia in mixed fuels and pushing for ammonia distribution infrastructure of four million tons.
In December last year, HD Hyundai, KNOC and Lloyd's Register also signed an agreement on joint development of Ammonia FSRU. HHI devised the basic design and KSOE built the regasification system, a key piece of equipment.
KNOC provided technical information and projects to build domestic infrastructure for the acquisition and storage of clean ammonia.
Write to Jae-Fu Kim at hu@hankyung.com
-
Aerospace & DefenseHD Hyundai Heavy Industries launches new frigate Chungnam
Apr 10, 2023 (Gmt+09:00)
1 Min read -
-
Shipping & ShipbuildingHD Hyundai, Korea Univ. open internship to develop future talent
Mar 24, 2023 (Gmt+09:00)
1 Min read -
Korean Innovators at CES 2023HD Hyundai to boost offshore wind power, future ships, CEO says
Jan 05, 2023 (Gmt+09:00)
2 Min read