hawai'i gas
Post on 07-Dec-2014
670 Views
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
Alaska LNG Summit 20121
c
HAWAI’I GAS: THE THREE-PHASE LNG PLAN
Phase I
Phase III
Phase II
LNG MOBILE EMERGENCY BACKUP
EXPANDED ISO DELIVERIES & PERMANENT STORAGE
VESSEL DELIVERIES & EXPANDED STORAGE
Portable LNG containers and vaporizers
Stationary LNG storage and vaporizers
Small-scale (Methane-Coral class) LNG/LPG carriers to Hawaii;
cryotanksSeptember 14,
2012
Alaska LNG Summit 20122
PHASE I: LNG MOBILE EMERGENCY BACKUP
Mobile LNG Container and Vaporizer September 14,
2012
Alaska LNG Summit 20123
PHASE I: OPERATIONS SCHEMATIC
• 40’ ISO containers shipped from West Coast to Hawaii via common carrier.
• ISO containers trucked to different sites where LNG is vaporized and utilized.
MAINLAND LNG
SOURCE
COMMON CARRIER Trans-Pacific
HAWAII PORT
MOBILE VAPORIZER
ISO filled with LNG
Trucking to facility
NATURAL GAS TO
PIPELINE OR CUSTOMER
LNG re-gasification
Empty ISO shipped back to Mainland for refill
September 14, 2012
Alaska LNG Summit 20124
PHASE II: Expanded ISO Deliveries and Permanent Tank Storage
September 14, 2012
Alaska LNG Summit 20125
PHASE II: OPERATIONS SCHEMATIC
• LNG-filled ISO containers are transported from West Coast to Hawaii.• ISO containers are then trucked to various TGC storage and regasification facilities, or transferred to
customer sites.
MAINLAND LNG
SOURCE
COMMON CARRIER Trans-Pacific
HAWAII PORT
LNG STORAGE
TANKSISO filled with
LNGTrucking to storage
facility
NATURAL GAS TO
PIPELINE OR CUSTOMER
LNG re-gasification
Empty ISO shipped back to Mainland for refill
LNG VAPORIZER
AT END USER
Trucking ISO to end user
LNG VAPORIZER
NATURAL GAS TO
PIPELINE OR CUSTOMER
September 14, 2012
Alaska LNG Summit 20126
PHASE III:Vessel Deliveries and Expanded LNG Storage
September 14, 2012
Alaska LNG Summit 20127
PHASE III: OPERATIONS SCHEMATIC
LNG TANKER
MAINLAND LIQUEFACTIO
N PLANT
HAWAII TERMINALS
LARGE CRYOGENIC STORAGE
REGASIFICATION
CCGTPOWER PLANT
TGC DISTRIBUTION NETWORK
• Small LNG tankers load with LNG at major liquefaction plants and deliver LNG to cryogenic storage at Hawaii terminals.
• LNG is regasified as needed and delivered to the existing network and to a state-of-the-art power plant.• System may continue to operate in parallel with ISO container deliveries.
September 14, 2012
Alaska LNG Summit 20128
PROJECT MILESTONES
PHASE I PHASE II PHASE III
Time
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 - 2025
Phase I
•LNG Supply/Transport 12
• ISO Acquisition 6 -12
•Vaporizer Acquisition 6
• FERC Phase I Application
3 - 6
Phase II
•Storage Siting/Permitting
12
•Engineering/Design 12
•FERC Phase II Application
12
•Final Engineering 6 - 9
•Construction 9 - 12
Phase III
•LNG Supply Contract 36-42
•Vessel Charter Negotiations
12
•Vessel Construction 24-36
•Site Selection/Engineering
12-18
•FERC/NEPA/Permitting 20-24
•Final Engineering 6-9
•Facilities Construction 24-30
CRITICAL PATH:Phase III FERC Application requires sight-specific engineering to begin in early 2013
CRITICAL PATH: Site layout and engineering for Phase II storage must begin now.
ISO Acquisition continues until fleet acquired.
September 14, 2012
Alaska LNG Summit 20129
RENEWABLES AND GAS CAN BE MAJOR ENERGY SOURCES IN HAWAI’I--SOON
By 2025, gas and renewables could make up 38% of Hawaii’s total energy supply
Gas and renewables are complementary. Wind and solar power need gas to balance their fluctuations
The gas infrastructure can be used for renewable gas as it becomes available
Hawai’i Gas has already pioneered renewable gas with its pilot plant on Oahu0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
2025
Shares of Gas & Renewables in Hawaii's Energy
Renewables
Gas
September 14, 2012
Alaska LNG Summit 201210
TOGETHER, RENEWABLES AND GAS CAN TRANSFORM HAWAI’I’S ENERGY MIX
Oil, 86%
Coal, 6%
Gas, 0%
Renewables, 7%
State Energy Mix, 2010
Oil, 55%
Coal, 7%
Gas, 14%
Renewables, 23%
State Energy Mix, 2025
September 14, 2012
Alaska LNG Summit 201211
WORKING TOGETHER FOR HAWAII’S RENEWABLE ENERGY FUTURE
The LNG strategy works when industry, government and the community unite, bringing experience, resources and
dedication to moving away from Hawaii’s dependence on a single source of energy:
Oil.September 14,
2012
top related