World's Largest LNG Terminal Relies on CENTUM to Maximize Safety and Reliability

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Executive Summary

Korean Gas Corporation, Incheon, South Korea
Korean Gas Corporation, Incheon, South Korea

Established by the Korean government in 1983, Korea Gas Corporation (KOGAS) is the world's largest importer of LNG, and the country's sole importer of this important resource. KOGAS is fully committed to providing clean, safe, and convenient energy to the people of Korea. The company currently operates LNG receiving terminals in Incheon, Pyeongtaek, and Tongyeong, and distributes natural gas and gas by-products via a 2,739 km pipeline network to power plants, gas utility companies, and city gas companies throughout the country.

The Incheon LNG terminal is the world's largest LNG receiving complex, and it supplies natural gas to the Incheon and Seoul metropolitan areas, which account for 40% of the country's natural gas demand. Built on a 990,000 m² plot of reclaimed land 8.7 km off the coast, the terminal has two plants with a jetty capable of accommodating two ultra-large LNG carriers of up to 100,000 tons in size and a total of ten 100,000 m³ above-ground storage tanks, two 140,000 m³ underground tanks, and eight 200,000 m³ underground tanks, giving it a total storage capacity of 2,880,000 m³ (Kl). The total gas send out capacity of the Incheon terminal is 4,350 tons per hour.

In 1996, Yokogawa Korea installed a CENTUM CS production control system at plant 1 of the Incheon terminal, and migrated this system to CENTUM VP in 2011. With the construction by KOGAS of plant 2 in 2004, Yokogawa Korea installed a CENTUM CS system, and subsequently installed another CENTUM CS 3000 system in 2009. Engineering work is now underway at plant 2 for migration to CENTUM VP. The Incheon terminal utilizes Yokogawa's CENTUM systems for the control and monitoring of facilities throughout both plants, including unloading arms, storage tanks, recondensors, open rack vaporizers (ORV), submerged combustion vaporizers (SMV), and trunk lines with metering stations.

The Challenges and the Solutions

1. Safe operation
At LNG receiving terminals, safety is a paramount concern with the transfer and storage of LNG from carriers. It is very important to maintain a constant pressure inside the storage tanks, which requires careful control of the operation of boil-off gas (BOG) compressors, recondensors, and pumps. By means of sequence functions, CENTUM operators can easily control the process from a remote location, starting and stopping the BOG compressors depending on BOG temperature, gas composition, and volume. In addition, KOGAS has a disaster protection system for dealing with critical situations, and personnel in the central control room can share information in real time with operators in plants 1 and 2, ensuring a timely and well coordinated response if fire or a gas leak is detected.

2. Steady gas supply
It is very important for KOGAS to be able to adjust flexibly to shifts in demand in the gas that it supplies to power plants, industrial companies, and residences. While seawater in an ORV is normally used to cool and vaporize the LNG, in periods of peak demand operation can be automatically switched over to an SMV that relies on the combustion of BOG to vaporize the LNG. Every aspect of these vaporization processes, from the switching on and off of pumps to the control of vaporization temperature and gas pressure, is carefully configured in the CENTUM system. The adjustment to shifts in demand is fully automated at this terminal, ensuring uninterrupted supply.

3. Proactive maintenance for asset excellence
Systems from other vendors that control the plant's offloading, tank gauging, pipe line monitoring, metering, and other processes are all integrated via a Modbus interface with each plant's CENTUM production control system. The data from these processes is used to make production reports, calculate plant efficiency, and analyze performance. For example, operators use an accumulated running time report to track how long each LNG pump, air compressor, and other rotating equipment throughout the terminal has been operating. This enables a proactive approach to the scheduling of inspections to determine when repair or replacement will be necessary. This puts the right information at the right time into the hands of the right operators and managers, so they can make timely and correct decisions. The system can also generate the following types of reports used by plant specialists to analyze overall performance of the LNG terminal as well as individual processes:

  1. LNG cost analysis
  2. Electric power consumption
  3. Fuel gas consumption
  4. Unit operation cost
  5. Daily cost analysis
  6. LNG unloading
  7. BOG treatment
  8. Odorant treatment
  9. Running time accumulation
  10. Yield accounting
CENTUM VP operator in central control room

CENTUM VP operator in central control room

Customer Satisfaction

People at the KOGAS Incheon LNG terminal, says, "With CENTUM and other systems, we have built an enterprise-wide operating information system. The visualization of all process data allows us to maintain a clear picture of the execution of our business plans, create optimal LNG supply chain scenarios, and make quick decisions and timely adjustments. With the CENTUM system, operability and safety are enhanced, and operators as well as managers can maximize the effectiveness of their activities." They went on to say, "We appreciate the continual support and the solutions that Yokogawa Korea has provided us. Yokogawa is one of our best partners."

KOGAS Incheon LNG terminal

KOGAS Incheon LNG terminal

 

Industries

  • Chaîne D'approvisionnement

    YOKOGAWA s'est engagé dans l'automatisation du GNL en fournissant les derniers capteurs, analyseurs, systèmes de contrôle et d'information depuis plus de 50 ans, depuis que le GNL a été importé pour la première fois au Japon. YOKOGAWA est l'un des plus grands fournisseurs d'automatisation de la chaîne d'approvisionnement mondiale du GNL, de la liquéfaction, du transport et de la regazéification.

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  • Regazéification et stockage du GNL

    Les systèmes de contrôle de la production de YOKOGAWA sont utilisés dans 54 terminaux de réception de GNL dans le monde, et dans 2/3 des terminaux au Japon. YOKOGAWA contribue à la stabilité et à l'efficacité de l'approvisionnement en gaz dans les terminaux de réception de GNL par le biais de l'ensemble du processus, du chargement, du stockage, de la regazéification et du comptage.

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  • Terminal

    Aujourd'hui, de nombreux utilisateurs finaux, non seulement dans les secteurs du pétrole, du gaz et de la pétrochimie, mais aussi dans les secteurs du GNL/GPL et du vrac, sont confrontés à des défis logistiques communs. Ces défis comprennent la réduction du temps de livraison du produit, l'amélioration de l'efficacité du chargement, l'adaptation aux changements dans le processus de fabrication, l'amélioration de la sécurité, l'augmentation de l'efficacité administrative, la réduction des coûts de main-d'œuvre, l'intégration des systèmes de données, la visualisation des opérations, la gestion du trafic, et ainsi de suite.

    Yokogawa fournit des solutions pour répondre aux besoins des clients en matière d'automatisation et de gestion des terminaux depuis des décennies.

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Les produits et solutions liés

  • CENTUM VP

    CENTUM VP has a simple and common architecture consisting of human machine interfaces, field control stations, and a control network.

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  • Distributed Control System (DCS)

    Our distributed control system (DCS) enables automation and control of industrial processes and enhanced business performance. Over 30,000 systems entrust Yokogawa DCS to deliver their production goals.

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