The present invention is directed to a floating plant for re-gasification of liquefied natural gas (LNG) and liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) in combination with the production of electric power.
Electric power is generated by combustion of re-gasified liquid gas. The produced heat during the generation of electric power is to be used for heating and vaporization of liquid refrigerated gas. The combination of the re-gasification of liquid gas and the production of electric power gives the possibility to establish a plant or station having a high efficiency and no disposal of cold or warm water to the environment.
Today many regions have rigorous requirements for the spill of heated or cooled water. As an example there is in certain areas a requirement that not more than four degrees temperature increase or decrease being allowed.
The technology of today for re-gasification of liquid refrigerated gas is mainly based upon the use of seawater being circulated through heat exchangers, often partly direct against refrigerated gas and partly by using a cooling medium in a secondary circuit. All the heat supply is mostly from the seawater. This raises a demand of great seawater amounts if only minor temperature differences can be extracted from the water.
The generation of electric power based upon the combustion of hydrocarbons provides three main principles to be utilized:
1. The combustion in a steam boiler for the production of steam to be used for the drive of a steam turbine producing electric power. The differential pressure over the steam turbine is established by the condensing of the steam. It is then a question of great heat amounts to be disposed of, and the seawater will most often be used if such water is available.
2.The combustion in a gas turbine having an exhaust vessel (“combined cycle”) connected. The electric power is then generated partly from said gas turbine and partly from a steam turbine using steam produced from the exhaust vessel. The heat from the condensing of steam also here has to be disposed of.
3. The combustion in a gas turbine without any plant for steam production (“single cycle”). Initially there is no recovering of exhaust heat, but by installing an exhaust vessel, the heat from said vessel can be used directly for the heating of the refrigerated gas.
In the plant for re-gasification and the production of electric power, according to the invention, the generated heat by the production of the electric power is used for heating and vaporization of liquid refrigerated gas. The combination of the re-gasification of liquid gas and the production of electric power makes possible a plant having no effluent of cold or warm water to the environment.
A rather high efficiency is achieved with such a plant for the generation of electric power according to the present invention. The plant is defined through the features given in the patent claims.
All the three above described types of a plant for the production of electric power can be used in the combination with a plant for the gasification of refrigerated liquid gas. If steam turbines are installed, the heated cooling water from the condensing of steam will be heat exchanged with cold gas. In plants having a gas turbine, hot steam or hot water from the exhaust vessel will be heat exchanged directly with the cold gas.
In the drawing
The plant 1 receives, as shown in
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The heated gas is to be exported from the gas terminal through pipe lines 10 to consumers on land. By the installation on a floating terminal, the first part of the pipe line from said terminal and down to the sea bottom will be a flexible riser. The remaining part of the pipe line may be of a conventional type.
The produced electric power is to be exported from the terminal to consumers on land through a high voltage cable 11. If the terminal is floating the cable between it and the sea bottom has to be sufficiently flexible to absorb any movements the platform may have.
The floating unit is to be geostationary, which means that it will not rotate during varying wind and wave directions. This involves that gas can be transferred to the pipe line without the use of a high pressure gas swivel, and further the electric power may be transferred without the use of swivel slip-rings for high voltage.
The intake of liquid gas will be from LNG/LPG ships. The transfer from the ship to the terminal can either be carried out such that the ship moors to a dock or similar on the terminal and so that LNG can be transferred through loading arms or by the transfer through a flexible hose 3. In the latter case it is made possible to transfer gas from ships having dynamic positioning equipment DPE to keep their position, by using towing vessels, or to transfer from ships that are moored to a mooring arrangement and thereby keeping their position at a distance from the terminal.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2009 1902 | May 2009 | NO | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/NO10/00174 | 5/11/2010 | WO | 00 | 12/27/2011 |