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Maritime Propulsion

Finland Breaks the Ice on LNG

Posted to Propulsion (by on May 9, 2016

Due for delivery in Q2 2016, Finland’s new icebreaker Polaris is the world’s first to feature dual fuel liquified natural gas (LNG) and diesel propulsion, earning the icebreaking vessel designations as the Finland’s most powerful and the world’s greenest.

Polaris undergoing outfitting at Arctech Helsinki Shipyard in January (Photo: Eric Haun)

Due for delivery in Q2 2016, Finland’s new icebreaker Polaris is the world’s first to feature dual fuel liquified natural gas (LNG) and diesel propulsion, earning the icebreaking vessel designations as the Finland’s most powerful and the world’s greenest.

Currently undergoing final outfitting at Arctech Helsinki Shipyard, the icebreaker is being built for the Finnish Transport Agency, who upon completion will sell Polaris to Arctia Icebreaking Oy, a subsidiary of state-owned Arctia Shipping, who manages all icebreaking operations in Finland.

A product of Finnish Arctic and maritime technological knowhow, Polaris draws upon some of the industry’s top names to secure a spot among the world’s most environmentally friendly and technologically advanced vessels.

Once delivered, Polaris will be able to break Baltic Sea ice under all conditions, and also features oil spill response and emergency towing capability at open sea.

The vessel's diesel-electric power plant includes two nine-cylinder Wärtsilä 9L34DF (rated 4,500 kilowatts each) and two 12-cylinder Wärtsilä 12V34DF (rated 6,000 kilowatts each) four-stroke medium speed dual fuel genets, as well as an additional eight-cylinder Wärtsilä 8L20DF auxiliary engine (rated 1,168 kilowatts). Combined power output is more than 22 megawatts.

Polaris' two vertical LNG tanks combine for a total volume of 800 cubic meters, enabling 10 days autonomy in typical winter conditions. Another 20 days autonomy is added via a combined 2,500 cubic meters capacity for fuel oil.

The icebrekaer also features a unique propulsion system: three electrically driven ice strengthened ABB Azipod units, two at the stern (6,5000 kilowatts each) and one at the bow (6,000 kilowatts), which combine for 19 megawatts, making Polaris Finland’s most powerful icebreaker to date.

Timeline
Contract effective date: 2/14/14
Production start: 7/21/14
Keel laid: 3/4/15
Naming ceremony: 12/11/15
Launch: 12/30/15
Expected delivery: Q2/16

Principal parameters
L oa (without fenders or towing notch): 10 m
L dwl: 98 m
B dwl: 24 m
T dwl: 8 m
DWT: 3,000t
Speed: 17 kn
Bollard pull: 185 t

Autonomy
Autonomy: 30 days
LNG winter operation: 10 days
Max autonomy with diesel oil: 20 days

Regulatory
Flag: Finland
Class notation: Lloyds Register
+100A1 Icebreaker(+), Oil Recovery, Ice Class PC4, *IWS, ECO(NOx3, P, Sox), +LMC, UMS, GF, NAV1, IBS, MPMS, TUG

Machinery
Fuel type (main engines, aux engines, steam boilers): LNG and MDO
LNG fuel tanks (Cyro): 2 x 400 m3
Maine diesel gensets: 2 x 6,000 kW + 2 x 4,500 kW
Diesel engines: Wärtsilä 12V34DF/9L34DF
Aux diesel genset: 1 x 1,168 kW
Rudder propulsors: ABB Azipod VI 2 x 6,500 kW (stern) + 1 x 6,000 kW (bow)

Environmental
Propulsion arrangement selected for optimal load in all ice conditions and modes of icebreaking
Engine configuration selected for optimal load in all operation modes
When operating with LNG, the vessel fulfills IMO Tier III emission requirements
When operating with low sulphur MDO, the vessel fulfills IMO Tier II requirements
Zero-emission principle for garbage and grey/black/bilge water

Tags: Azimuth pod Icebreakers LNG fuel Shipyards