Bureau Veritas sharpens ice tools
Leading international classification
society Bureau Veritas has responded to demand for safe LNG transportation in
the Arctic regions by developing new high-level tools to assess cargo sloshing
in ice conditions. It has also developed a cutting-edge probabilistic method
for assessing ice loads on structure which will reduce the time and data needed
to assess the structure of vessels and units designed for heavy ice operation.
A research collaboration with the State
Maritime Technical University of St Petersburg has led to BV upgrading IceSTAR
to include the use of probabilistic methods to calculate ice loads. “Ice
properties vary widely,” explains Besse. “There are always issues with input
data. This research has proven that using stochastic methods we can overcome
limitations in the input data to produce safe and robust outputs for the loads
which ships and offshore structures may expect from Arctic ice.”
Bureau
Veritas is a world leader in conformity assessment and certification services.
Created in 1828, the Group has 59,000 employees in around 1,330 offices and
laboratories located in 140 countries. Bureau Veritas helps its clients to
improve their performance by offering services and innovative solutions in
order to ensure that their assets, products, infrastructure and processes meet
standards and regulations in terms of quality, health and safety, environmental
protection and social responsibility.
Pierre Besse, Director of Innovation,
Bureau Veritas, says, “All eyes are on the Arctic sea routes and on the opening
up of the Arctic mineral and energy resources. We have to ensure the vessels
and offshore units that operate in those extreme conditions are safe. That is
why we have invested heavily in research into ice loads on structure and the
effects of cargo sloshing caused by collisions with ice for LNG carriers and
oil tankers. That investment gives us powerful tools which we are using to
shorten the time needed to assess designs for key Arctic projects and routes.”
A new module for Bureau Veritas’ IceSTAR
ice load calculation tool will calculate the kinetic energy imparted to the
cargo by a collision with ice. The kinematics derived from IceSTAR can then be
used together with CFD analysis to determine how the cargo will slosh and the
extra loads this will impose on the ship’s structure and the LNG containment
system.
Says Besse, “When gas and oil cargoes
begin moving regularly through the Arctic it is certain that ships and ice will
interact. The energy from those collisions will cause the cargo to move violently,
and we have to make sure the ships and especially LNG containment systems are
built to withstand that. It is a complex calculation requiring high level
modelling but we can do that, and do it in a commercially acceptable time
frame. BV is working on a number of high Arctic projects such as Shtokman and
Yamal and these tools will make them safe and ready more quickly.”
VISIT Bureau
Veritas at NEVA, St Petersburg, September 24 - 28. Hall 7 Stand Number R7213
www.bureauveritas.com for corporate
information www.veristar.com for marine information
For
more information:
Pierre
Besse
Director
of Innovation
Bureau
Veritas
+33
1 55 24 7465
Labels: arctic, classification, ice, navigation, offshore energy
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