WHAT WE DO?

Our mainly products were globe valve,angle valve,gate valve,SDNR valve,check valve,hose valve,storm valve,butterfly valve,air vent head,strainer tec, according to DIN,JIS,ANSI,API,BS,GB,CB,CBM,AS standard. Material is including cast iron,ductile iron,cast steel,cast bronze,forged brass,stainless steel,forge steel,and can be extensively used in marine,petroleum,chemical, metallurgical,electric power,architectural,agriculture field.

WHAT WE DO?

OUR VALVE PACKING

We have our own packing worshop and workman to tailored packages according to the product.All of our valves were packing carefully by plywood cases,to avoid damage when transportation by air,by sea,or by courier.

OUR VALVE PACKING

OUR STORAGE

Our warehouse area was more than 2000 square meters with large ex-stock valves including gate valves,globe valves,butterfly valves ,bronze vavles and air vent head,to meet the demand of customer's spot requirement.This make us save the time to prepare order and provide the customer faster delivery.

OUR STORAGE

PRODUCT PROCESSING

We have more than 120 product processing staffs,including 24 senior engineers&12 R&D engineers,Moreover,We have well-working machining equipments and inpsection equipments for vavles.That make sure we could processing the high-quality valves.

PRODUCT PROCESSING

Ferguson Marine consortium to develop hydrogen-powered ferry

2018-06-27 17:38:53

Ferguson Marine consortium to develop hydrogen-powered ferry
New investment has transformed Ferguson Marine into one of the most advanced shipyards in the world. Credit: Ferguson Marine.
A consortium led by Scotland-based shipyard Ferguson Marine Engineering has secured funding from the European Union (EU) to develop the world’s first seagoing car and passenger ferry powered by hydrogen.
The €9.3m funding has been provided under the EU’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme and will be added to the project’s overall cost of around €12.6m.
Renewable electricity will be used to produce the vessel’s fuel as part of the project known as HySeas III.
The project’s initial objective is to build and prove the vessel’s modular drive train onshore, testing for stress and durability under conditions using real-world data from existing vessels.
The hydrogen-fuelled vessel will be built after completion of the test.
The vessel is scheduled to be deployed around Scotland’s Orkney region, which currently produces hydrogen from constrained renewable energy.
“Ferguson Marine has been at the global forefront of green marine propulsion technology development.”
It will also feature technology developed by Denmark-based Ballard Power Systems Europe.
Ferguson Marine Engineering chief naval architect Chris Dunn said: “Over recent years, Ferguson Marine has been at the global forefront of green marine propulsion technology development.
“This exciting project is yet another positive step on that journey and puts us firmly on track to deliver the world’s first zero-emission, hydrogen fuel cell-powered commercial ROPAX ferry in 2020.”
The HySeas III project is jointly led by Ferguson Marine and the University of St Andrews, while it includes Orkney Islands Council, Kongsberg Maritime, Ballard Power Systems Europe, McPhy, DLR – German Aerospace Center, and Interferry as members.