Paris (AFP)
- Global shipping firms under pressure to cut carbon emissions are
experimenting with an age-old technology: sails to harness ocean winds and
reduce reliance on costly fuels.
"Five
years ago, such projects would have gotten us thrown out by security" at
shipping firms, said French naval architect Marc Van Peteghem.
"Now
shipowners are listening to us," he said.
A design
from his firm, VPLP, has just been picked by European rocket-maker Ariane Group
for a sail-equipped cargo ship to transport parts for its new Ariane 6 launcher
to French Guiana starting in 2022.
The ship
will be equipped with four huge rectangular sails rising 30 metres (100 feet)
high, supplementing a motor and cutting fuel consumption by about 30 percent.
It might
not be the first, though: French start-up Neoline announced in July it would
start building a sail-powered transporter this year for launch by the end of
2021.
"We
have 5,000 years of experience in sailing with wind -- it's renewable energy,
and less intermittent than solar power," Neoline's managing director Jean
Zanuttini told AFP at his office in Nantes, western France.
So far the
firm has orders from three clients, including French automaker Renault.
But using
wind to meet carbon goals is not as simple as building new boats or rigging
sails on existing ones, as some ship owners have already done.
"Our
136-metre ship costs 30 percent more than current ships," Zanuttini said,
"but we compensate by using 80 to 90 percent less fuel."
Wind-powered
vessels are also slower -- a hard sell for some shipowners and clients who want
their raw materials and merchandise to move as quick as possible.
'Everything's in transition'
Operators
of the 60,000 to 90,000 oil tankers, bulk carriers, ferries and other huge
cargo ships plying the seas are racing to find alternatives to fuel oil as
pollution rules are tightened.
The
industry generates roughly three percent of Earth-warming greenhouse gas
emissions worldwide, a figure that experts say could reach 17 percent by 2050
if nothing is done.
Also,
starting January 1, levels of air-polluting sulphur in marine fuel must be
below 0.5 percent, according to new International Maritime Organization
standards -- a sharp drop from today's 3.5 percent.
This is
forcing firms to seek out cleaner, more costly fuels or invest in
"scrubbers" to filter sulphur out of smokestacks.
"Everything
is up for grabs, everything is in transition," said Gavin Allwright,
secretary of the International Windship Association in London.
This month
his group organised a wind conference at the Royal Institution of Naval
Architects in London, just a stone's throw from Trafalgar Square and its statue
of renowned British naval officer Horatio Nelson.
Even if
sailing goes back centuries, "the vast majority of the technologies are
21st-century technologies and materials. They are almost fully automated,
one-button computer operated," Allwright said.
Beside
sails, some firms have designed huge kites that pull cargo ships, though just a
few operators have adopted the system.
'Opportunity'
Another
option is to use "Flettner rotors" like those built by Norsepower of
Finland, employing a technology developed by German engineers in the 1920s.
The tall
columns are installed on a ship and set spinning, creating lift that propels a
ship forward when they catch a perpendicular wind.
Ville
Paakkari, a Norsepower representative at the London conference, said the
columns can be installed in just a few hours, and can cut fuel consumption by
five to 10 percent.
"The
investment pays off in three to eight years," he told participants.
So far,
Norsepower's rotors are used on just two cargo ships and the Viking Grace ferry
between Finland and Sweden.
But wind
advocates say tighter pollution rules -- potentially including more widespread
taxes on carbon emissions -- will force shipping firms to clean up their act.
"People
only change when they are forced to," Van Peteghem said.
"We
need to find solutions so that what shipowners consider a constraint today will
become an opportunity, and make them want to change," he said.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.