CAT MARINE AND DAMEN TO DEPLOY METHANOL-FUEL ENGINES

May 24, 2024 | Marine propulsion & machinery news

Caterpillar Marine says it has achieved significant advances in the development of its methanol dual-fuel Cat 3500E marine engines, having concluded a Memorandum of Understanding with Damen Shipyards Group, planning to deploy the first set of field demonstrator 3500E marine engines in 2026.

Cat 3500E marine engines will use innovative dual-fuel technology that leverages proven diesel fuel systems and supports vessels’ low-pressure – below 10 bar – fuel systems. The methanol dual-fuel Cat 3500E engine targets the same performance and durability as the current 3500E diesel engine while meeting emission standards and delivering 100% power.

Caterpillar Marine VP and GM Brad Johnson said: “We’re leveraging our deep dual-fuel expertise to help reduce emissions in the maritime industry. We look forward to putting the first Cat 3500E demonstration engines in the water with Damen Shipyards in 2026.”

Andres Perez, global tug segment manager, Caterpillar Marine added: “We’re expanding the 3500E platform’s fuel flexibility to provide customers with a wider array of options to navigate the energy transition. Fuel flexibility is key to future-proofing assets. This technology will enable owners to adopt their fuel of choice when the conditions are right without having to build a new asset or face cost-prohibitive retrofits.”

Will Watson, global product director, Caterpillar Marine said: “Our dual-fuel Cat 3500E marine engines are optimised to achieve high methanol substitution rates over a wide range of load factors, including the low load ranges that tugs operate in most of the time. For example, a 28m tug transiting at 8 knots requiring only 600kW of propulsion power would target to achieve a methanol substitution on an energy basis above 70%. This will enable operators to reduce greenhouse gas emissions while experiencing the power and performance they’re accustomed to.”

The methanol dual-fuel 3516E engine development takes a holistic approach, targeting the highest methanol substitution while meeting regulated emissions. Non-regulated emissions, such as formaldehyde, are part of the focus, and the IMO III solution will abate regulated and non-regulated emissions, targeting the same aftertreatment space claim.

Image: Cat 3500E engine (source: Caterpillar Marine)

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