Blue Ammonia is ammonia (NH₃) produced from natural gas, where the CO₂ generated during production is captured and stored using carbon capture technology.
It is considered a low-carbon marine fuel option for future shipping.
How Blue Ammonia is Produced
1️⃣ Natural gas → converted to hydrogen (via steam methane reforming)
2️⃣ CO₂ produced during process
3️⃣ CO₂ is captured using Carbon Capture and Storage (CCS)
4️⃣ Hydrogen + Nitrogen → Ammonia (NH₃)
Why It Is Called “Blue”?
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Grey ammonia → CO₂ released to atmosphere
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Blue ammonia → CO₂ captured & stored
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Green ammonia → Produced using renewable electricity (no fossil fuel)
Why Shipping Is Interested?
Driven by decarbonization targets set by the
International Maritime Organization
Advantages:
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No CO₂ emitted during combustion
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Carbon-free fuel at point of use
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Suitable for large ocean-going vessels
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Easier to store than hydrogen
Challenges in Marine Use
⚠️ Toxic and corrosive
⚠️ Requires special fuel systems
⚠️ Lower energy density than HFO
⚠️ NOx emissions must be controlled
Engine Considerations
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Modified dual-fuel engines
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Special fuel pumps and sealing systems
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Ventilation and gas detection
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Emergency shutdown systems
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