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Journal article

Comparative environmental techno-economic assessments (eTEAs) of onboard amine-based carbon capture and boil-off gas handling systems on LCO2 carriers

Abstract

The continuous increase in greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and the strengthening of environmental regulations have brought Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage (CCUS) technology into focus. Most liquefied carbon dioxide carriers (LCO2Cs) employ liquefied natural gas (LNG) propulsion, but they still emit significant GHG emissions, highlighting the need for further reduction. While boil-off gas (BOG) handling is essential for long-distance LCO2C operations, no studies have examined onboard carbon capture and storage (OCCS) systems integrated with BOG handling systems. This study evaluates five operational cases—BOG re-liquefaction (RLIQ), OCCS, purge gas recapture, and their combinations—to assess the GHG reduction and economic feasibility of LCO2Cs. Although standalone RLIQ and OCCS showed similar reduction rates (29% and 30%), the avoidance cost of OCCS alone was more than two times higher. Integrating BOG RLIQ, OCCS, and purge recirculation achieved up to 69% well-to-wake emission reduction with an avoidance cost of $355.9/tCO₂eq. Therefore, integrating OCCS with BOG RLIQ is the most effective approach for LCO2Cs. Despite limited competitiveness under current low carbon tax levels, the avoidance cost of $320–416/tCO₂eq remains favorable compared with other low-carbon technologies such as direct air capture ($500–1100/tCO₂eq).

Authors

Shin H; Oh J; Jeon Y; Lim Y; Adams TA

Journal

Carbon Capture Science & Technology, Vol. 18, ,

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

March 1, 2026

DOI

10.1016/j.ccst.2026.100569

ISSN

2772-6568

Labels

Sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

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