“Fleet managers are under increasing commercial and environmental pressure to curtail the amount of refrigerant consumed and our experience tells us that containment is the only solution. A shipboard plant is no different to a domestic refrigerator. It is a contained system that if properly maintained should not require constant topping up. Refrigerant is not a consumable it is an asset that should be retained.” Service engineers have completed their assessment of the first vessel under the MOL LNG agreement, the 87,000dwt Gigira Laitebo.
Without disruption to vessel operations in Papua New Guinea, service engineers inspected main air conditioning plants, provisions plants, inert gas cooling systems and self-contained AC units, with in-situ repairs undertaken and recommendations given to prevent vessel downtime. MOL LNG Transport (Europe) Purchasing Manager Lee Tierney said: “The agreement we have in place with Oceanic Technical Solutions supports our energy and environmental efficiency strategy to reduce the quantity of refrigerants our vessels use.” Fleet Manager Mark Macey added: “By containing the refrigeration plant and preventing costly refrigerant gases from venting we not only reduce further the environmental impact of our operations but we reduce significantly ship operation costs.” Oceanic Technical Solutions’ Technical Director, Dave Lloyd, said: “The inspection and leak testing of shipboard refrigeration equipment will soon become a mandatory issue. Regulation (EU) No 517/2014 entered into force in 2015 to strengthen existing measures on fluorinated greenhouse gases.