Skip to main content

Hitachi and Shell are working on fuel alternative

Hitachi Construction Machinery (Europe) NV (HCME) and Shell are now working together on testing the Shell GTL (gas-to-liquids) fuel in construction operations. The latest range of Hitachi Zaxis-5 excavators is being used to trial the innovative liquid fuel. This concept is being tested as a potential solution to environmental and quality concerns surrounding conventional crude oil-derived diesel. The test programme has been developed as a solution for cleaner burning fuel products. This is in response to th
November 15, 2013 Read time: 3 mins
233 Hitachi Construction Machinery (Europe) NV (HCME) and 763 Shell are now working together on testing the Shell GTL (gas-to-liquids) fuel in construction operations. The latest range of Hitachi Zaxis-5 excavators is being used to trial the innovative liquid fuel. This concept is being tested as a potential solution to environmental and quality concerns surrounding conventional crude oil-derived diesel. The test programme has been developed as a solution for cleaner burning fuel products. This is in response to the increasing importance of new technology to satisfy EU Stage IIIB engine emission regulations. Hitachi uses a number of sophisticated technologies to meet the latest standards.

Shell GTL Fuel is produced from natural gas in a chemical transformation process. It is colourless, almost odourless, highly biodegradable and can help to reduce local emissions and engine noise in certain types of engines and under certain driving conditions. It has a high cetane number (75/80 versus 48/56 for refined diesel), burns more cleanly, and produces fewer nitrogen oxides, sulphur oxides and particulate matter than regular diesel.

Shell has over 35 years of research in this field and is a leader in GTL technology and production. HCME switched over to Shell GTL Fuel for the first fill of the machines at its Amsterdam factory in May 2013 with the aim of achieving a consistently high level of fuel quality.

According to Hitachi, Shell GTL Fuel is compatible with existing diesel technology and supply infrastructure. It can be used in existing fleets of both new and older heavy-duty diesel engines but without the need for any modifications, cleaning of fuel systems or additional investment. This makes it a cost-effective, easy-to-use and -implement solution.

HCME has been using a ZX210LC-5 medium excavator for a Shell GTL Fuel storage stability test. The purpose was to run the engine for the minimum amount of time, so that the fuel was stored for as long as possible in the tank under the most demanding conditions. These equate to long-term storage under various ambient conditions, from winter through to summer, with the occasional warming up of the engine for a short period of time.

In addition, HCME and Shell sanctioned a cold operability test with two Stage IIIB-compliant ZX470LCH-5s in Norway earlier this year. The Zaxis excavators are owned by one of the country’s largest Hitachi customers, Carl C Fon, which was engaged on a significant road construction project. The temperatures plummeted to -20°C on the demanding site, which were deemed as ideal conditions for the test. Reports from the site say that there was no difference in performance between the Shell GTL fuel and standard fuel.

The basic technology behind GTL is the German Fischer-Tropsch process, which was developed in the 1920s and refined by Shell’s proprietary technology. Firstly, the natural gas is converted into CO and H2, which are then combined in the Fischer-Tropsch process to form paraffins. These are refined (through hydrocracking) into various synthetic products, including GTL fuel. Shell opened its first GTL production plant in Bintulu, Malaysia, in 1993 and inaugurated the world-scale Pearl GTL plant in Ras Laffan, Qatar, in 2011. The plant has a capacity to produce around 140,000 barrels of GTL products/day, including fuels, chemical feedstock and lubricant base oils.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Waste-full paving in Australia
    November 18, 2022
    The use of waste materials in roads, including higher proportions of RAP, is gaining ground.
  • Innovative burner cooling for asphalt plant
    March 15, 2016
    Günter Papenburg has developed a cooling feature for asphalt plants that it says shortens the time normally needed for a plant’s coal dust-fuelled burners to reach operating temperatures. The cooling technology has been licenced from LOESCHE, a German producer of coal milling systems. GP managing director Carsten Weiss claimed that the firm’s burners consume more of the fuel than rival types, which only burn 90% of the coal dust. “We get an asphalt temperature of 170°C with low emissions and high efficiency
  • Major emissions challenges for ADTs
    February 14, 2012
    The introduction of the latest emissions standards in North America and Europe are requiring major design rethinks for earthmoving machines such as ADTs, Mike Woof reports. With the introduction of the Tier 4 Interim/Stage IIIB emissions legislation, major changes are being made to off-highway machines. One of the machine types most affected by this legislation will be the articulated dump truck (ADT) and designers have faced major challenges in developing solutions that retain what are now seen as key oper
  • Upgrading a Benninghoven asphalt plant with new technology
    October 18, 2017
    Benninghoven plant owned by Breisach-based Johann Joos Tief- und Straßenbauunternehmung is 40 years old but now features new technology, increasing its range of capabilities. To meet demands for the use of RAP, the plant has been reconfigured with the latest technology from Benninghoven. This new addition to the plant will allow its facility as a Recycling Priority Plant (RPP). The plant upgrade features a Benninghoven BA 4000 system with a capacity of up to 320tonnes/hour.