Clean Marine’s EGCS First to Operate Inside ECA
MV Balder, equipped with Exhaust Gas Cleaning System (EGCS) from Clean Marine, is reported to be the first vessel in the world to operate this type of system in the U.S. Emission Control Area (ECA). Upon arrival in Baltimore recently, the vessel’s Master sought approval from the coast guard to enter and exit the ECA Zone using High Sulfur Fuel Oil with EGCS, rather than burning the more expensive Low Sulphur Fuel Oil (1% sulfur content). Clean Marine invited USCG and EPA to observe the EGCS in operation for compliance with the ECA. Officials from the U.S. Coast Guard, led by Lieutenant Commander Edgardo Cruz (Chief Inspection Division, Sector Baltimore), conducted a Port State Control exam on August 29 in Baltimore and confirmed that the Clean Marine EGCS installed onboard was operating satisfactory and found to be in full compliance with MARPOL Annex VI as an equivalency to utilizing low sulfur fuel oil as per the IAPP Certificate. Clean Marine CEO, Nils Høy-Petersen said, “Meeting the U.S. Coast Guard’s stringent requirements proves that our unique and competitive multi-stream EGCS solution is a sound technology that enables vessels of all types to transit through a U.S. ECA.” The Clean Marine EGCS on board the handymax bulk carrier bulk carrier is an integrated, multi-stream system which cleans the exhaust from one main engine, three auxiliary engines and one boiler. The system is also a hybrid type which can operate in both open and closed loop.
www.cleanmarine.no
(As published in the October 2013 edition of Maritime Reporter & Engineering News - www.marinelink.com)
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Other stories from October 2013 issue
Content
- LeBeouf Celebrates Double Christening page: 10
- Sofware Solutions Picking up Steam page: 12
- Winn Willard: Bringing Venerable Designs Forward page: 14
- U.S. Defense Conducts Maritime Strike Ops page: 18
- Safety: A Shift in Culture page: 20
- Hidden Exposures Can Sink a Business page: 24
- MARIN Debuts Tug Simulators page: 26
- Blowing in the “Vind” page: 28
- Year of the C-Dragon page: 32
- Maersk & New Containership Economics 101 page: 34
- GOL SALVAGE Taking on the Global Giants page: 40
- Advancing Monitoring Requires Advanced Oversight page: 44
- The Netherlands: Maritime Nation Thrives Despite Downturn page: 47
- Anything but Standard: Damen Newbuild and Repair Group Targets Global Growth page: 48
- Barge Master Provides Stable Platform for Crane, Offshore Ops page: 50
- Offshore Logistics: Wilson, Sons Group & Brasco Offshore Logistics page: 54
- Subsea Vessels Poised for Increased Global Demand page: 56
- APL Saves $30M/Year through Hull Optimization page: 58
- Bore, NAPA & ClassNK Team for Energy Consumption Study page: 60
- Damen Quick Docking/Fuel Saving Package page: 69
- MTU Series 8000 Marine Engines page: 69
- Air Products Nitrogen Membrane Generator page: 69
- FloScan: ABS Certification for New Flowmeters page: 69
- Fitch Fuel Catalyst page: 69
- Portable Industrial Combustion Gas & Emissions Analyzer page: 69
- Survitec: PFD Innovations page: 69
- Fire Detection from Fireboy-Xintex page: 70
- Paint Gun Washers Maintenance Kit page: 70
- Videotel Launches New Ports and Pilots Catalogue page: 70
- Onboard Drinking Water: Martek Marine Advises page: 70
- Bestobell FLIV for LNG Carrier page: 70
- New Diesel Welder/Generators page: 70
- Clean Marine’s EGCS First to Operate Inside ECA page: 70
- Victaulic Unveils Press-To-Connect Pipe-Joining System page: 71
- ExxonMobil Environmentally Acceptable Lubricants page: 71
- MTNW Debuts LCI-90i-IS page: 71
- Rolls-Royce Gas Turbine for Combat Ship page: 71
- Home Study For Mariners page: 71
- Anti Corrosion Technology Clam page: 71
- New Engine and Steering Solution page: 71