First call of a Q-Max at Montoir-de-Bretagne Elengy terminal

Montoir-de-Bretagne
07 October 2020

Elengy’s Montoir-de-Bretagne terminal has just received for the first time a Q-Max, the largest LNG carrier in the world.

 

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345 m long (more than the Eiffer Tower ) and 54 m wide, the Al Mayeda ship from Qatar (hence the Q of Q-Max) carries up to 267,000 m3 of liquified natural gaz (LNG), approximately ten times the yearly residential energy consumption of the Nantes metropolitan area.

The Montoir-de-Bretagne LNG terminal, in the port of Nantes Saint-Nazaire, is well located to benefit from: a privileged position on the Atlantic coast, right on the entrance to the Loire estuary, with a wide access channel, and with high standard quality port infrastructures and services. Regularly renovated and modernised, the site can not only accommodate these giants of the seas but is now a particularly attractive LNG entry point for France and its neighbouring markets. Over the past few years, , it has been the leader in LNG transhipment operations in Europe, a service provided in complete safety thanks to its two berths configuration.

Since its commissioning in 1980, the Montoir-de-Bretagne LNG terminal has received more than 210 different LNG carriers, out of a world fleet of approximately 570. The LNG shipments not only come from Qatar but from various other countries spanning from Russia to Australia.

A European gateway to the gas market, Elengy Montoir-de-Bretagne industrial site is a major global hub. Today, as a responsible industrial company, Elengy offers services and solutions to promote the use of LNG and is committed to the energy transition alongside other port players. Nantes Saint-Nazaire Port relies in particular on the LNG sector in its approach to the energy and ecological transition of the estuary.

 


 

Montoir-de-Bretagne LNG Terminal
125 employees
Started in 1980

  • 3 tanks of 120,000 m3 of LNG (1 tank ≈ 72,000,000 m3 of gas ≈ annual consumption of a city of 200,000 inhabitants)
  • regasification capacity: 10 billion m3 of gas per year ≈1/4 of annual gas consumption in France
  • 2 berths capable of accommodating LNG carriers from 65,000 m3 to 267,000 m3 (type Q Max)

 

2019 Key figures:

  • 130 calls: an all-time record
  • 82.7 TWh of gas sent into the transport network (19% of consumption in France)
  • peak flows in March equivalent to the power of 18 nuclear reactors