Harboursandport.com: Oslo - DNV has awarded the Norwegian technology provider HAV Group ASA preliminary approval for its hydrogen-based energy system.
HAV Hydrogen H2 System (copyright: HAV Group ASA)
A statement signed by the Global Head of Corporate Communications, Maritime Communications, DNV, Tomas Barrett, stated that the preliminary approval through DNV means that HAV Group ASA can confidently enter the final design stage and is one step closer to commercializing its hydrogen system.
Green
hydrogen could play an important role in the decarbonization of shipping – both
in terms of its potential as an enabler for synthetic fuels, as well as its
direct use as ship fuel. However, hydrogen’s unique properties make it a
complex fuel to work with, and the lack of prescriptive regulations means that
companies wishing to launch hydrogen systems need to follow the IMO guidelines
on alternative design (MSC.1/Circ.1455). As with all emerging fuels, the
maintenance of high safety levels when using hydrogen is paramount.
“The
Alternative design approval process is used for novel ship designs that cannot
be approved with the current prescriptive regulations and the final approval is
granted by the Flag State. We at DNV, were very pleased that HAV Group ASA
selected us as their chosen partner to carry out a third-party verification
review as part of the Alternative Design approval process,” explained Ivar HÃ¥berg, Director of Approval, Ship Classification, DNV
Maritime.
He added: “Our assessments have shown that the preliminary design complied with
the goal and functional requirements in the IGF Code (IMO International Code of
Safety for Ships using Gases or other Low-flashpoint Fuels). This means that
HAV Group ASA has successfully demonstrated that their concept fulfills the
initial criteria for safe and reliable operations with hydrogen as ship fuel.
It’s been a pleasure to work with HAV Group ASA, and we look forward to seeing
the final design take shape.”
Gunnar
Larsen, CEO of HAV Group ASA, said: “Getting a hydrogen energy system off the
ground is a complex and very challenging undertaking, and we are very proud to
have come this far. Getting to this stage has been the result of four years of
cooperation with our internal and external partners in the FreeCo2ast project
and excellent support from experts at DNV. Their guidance has been essential in
successfully navigating the Alternative Design process.”
In a
separate project, DNV advisory experts supported HAV Group ASA with Hazard
Identification (HAZID study) and Quantitative Risk Analysis (QRA) for every
aspect of their hydrogen fuel system, including bunkering, storage tanks, the
fuel supply system, and other auxiliary systems that are connected to the
hydrogen system onboard the vessels.
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