SMAHRT - Scalable Modular Ammonia to Hydrogen Refueling Terminal

Find Similar History 13 Claim Ownership Request Data Change Add Favourite

Title
SMAHRT - Scalable Modular Ammonia to Hydrogen Refueling Terminal

CoPED ID
8330f481-caf6-41fb-810d-26acff8e0ef6

Status
Closed


Value
£271,710

Start Date
Sept. 30, 2020

End Date
Dec. 31, 2020

Description

More Like This


The aim to reduce the carbon footprint of transport, or to at least become a carbon neutral society, is currently a main driver for introducing zero emission fuels on a wide scale (domestic, industry, power and transport) and in particular the Aviation and Marine sectors. Green Hydrogen and Green Ammonia, for which hydrogen is produced by electrolysis from renewable energy sources, can be considered to have zero carbon emission and fulfil the most ambitious environmental sustainability goals. The UN's shipping agency - International Maritime Organisation (IMO) has agreed to sector-wide targets to pursue a 70% reduction of emission intensity (from Ports and Vessels) and a 50% overall emission reduction within shipping by 2050\. The UN, through the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), has similarly adopted the Carbon Offsetting and Reduction Scheme for International Aviation (CORSIA). The object of the SMAHRT project (Scalable Modular Ammonia to Hydrogen Refuelling Terminals) is to design, build, install and operate the infrastructure required to refuel marine vessels and ground support vehicles at Seaports (and Airports) with compressed Green Hydrogen produced on-site from Ammonia as the liquid carrier for hydrogen transport, delivery, storage and bunkering (i.e. refuelling of vessels). SMAHRT is an integral feature of the Dock-to-Dock ("D2D") project and its "Smart-Multiport". The objective of D2D is to repurpose port infrastructures to be an essential component of future Smart Cities in their drive towards zero emissions and energy efficient, integrated and sustainable transportation solutions of which SMAHRT is essential. The innovation of SMAHRT is the development of modular, containerised, liquid ammonia cracking to hydrogen equipment with purification, compression, storage and distribution infrastructure, only seen in large scale static Ammonia plants. SMAHRT will not only sit within the seaport/airport infrastructure but will also be capable of being loaded onto the emerging new generation of electric autonomous zero emission ships (eAZE) as a compact source of continuous onboard hydrogen supply, or, when integrated with a fuel-cell, a self-contained source of electrical power for hybrid-electric vessels The containerised SMAHRT would be periodically resupplied with liquefied ammonia, benefiting from the ease of transport and relative high density of ammonia (2x the density of liquid hydrogen).. SMAHRT will facilitate the growth of hydrogen fuel cell (H2FC) powered vessels and ground transport thus "_Accelerating the shift to low carbon transport"._ This is an essential component for both the Maritime and Aviation sectors in meeting the zero emissions targets set by the UN.

SMART PORTS SYSTEMS LTD PARTICIPANT_ORG
SMART PORTS SYSTEMS LTD LEAD_ORG
SMART PORTS LTD PARTICIPANT_ORG

Arnaud Didey PM_PER

Subjects by relevance
  1. Emissions
  2. Hydrogen
  3. Renewable energy sources
  4. Maritime navigation
  5. Fuels
  6. Ships
  7. Ammonia
  8. Shipping
  9. Transport
  10. Environmental effects
  11. Autonomous ships
  12. Energy efficiency
  13. Greenhouse gases
  14. Warehousing
  15. Carbon footprint
  16. Carbon dioxide
  17. Decrease (active)
  18. Infrastructures
  19. Carbon neutrality
  20. Fuel cells

Extracted key phrases
  1. SMAHRT project
  2. Scalable modular Ammonia
  3. Large scale static Ammonia plant
  4. Hydrogen Refueling Terminal
  5. Carbon emission
  6. Green Ammonia
  7. Hydrogen transport
  8. Compressed Green Hydrogen
  9. Hydrogen fuel cell
  10. Emission fuel
  11. International Civil Aviation Organisation
  12. Overall emission reduction
  13. Liquid hydrogen
  14. Carbon neutral society
  15. Continuous onboard hydrogen supply

Related Pages

UKRI project entry

UK Project Locations
10 km
Leaflet | © OpenStreetMap contributors