Future cloudy-sky shipping .. using  90% less CO2 .. for half the delivery 
speed ..


Sweden's new car carrier is the world's largest wind-powered vessel

Jacopo Prisco, CNN • Updated 16th October 2020
https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/oceanbird-wind-powered-car-carrier-spc-intl/


A wind-powered transatlantic car carrier, Oceanbird, is being designed by 
Wallenius Marine, a Swedish shipbuilder, with support from the Swedish 
government and several research institutions.

With capacity for 7,000 vehicles, the 650 foot-long vessel is a similar size to 
conventional car carriers, but it will look radically different.

The ship's hull is topped by five telescopic "wing sails," each 260 feet tall.

Capable of rotating 360 degrees without touching each other, the sails can be 
retracted to 195 feet in order to clear bridges or withstand rough weather.

The sails, which will be made of steel and composite materials, need to be this 
size to generate enough propulsive power for the 35,000-ton ship.

Although "the general principles of solid wing sails is not new," designing the 
Oceanbird's sails has been a challenge, says Mikael Razola, a naval architect 
and research project manager for Oceanbird at Wallenius Marine.

That's because these are the tallest ship sails that have ever been constructed.

"This ship, at the top of the mast, will be more than 100 meters (328 feet) 
above the water surface," says Razola.

"When you move up into the sky that much, wind direction and velocity change 
quite a lot."

To better understand the atmospheric conditions at this height, Wallenius 
mounted sensors on top of its existing vessels, while they were crossing the 
Atlantic, and gathered data on wind velocity and veer (a clockwise change in 
wind direction), up to 650 feet above sea level. "All of this information has 
helped us design an efficient wing and hull system, that can make the most of 
the power available in the wind," says Razola.

Cleaning up a dirty industry

Crucial elements in the global automotive trade, oceangoing car carriers are 
known as RoRo -- the name derives from "roll on, roll off." Rather than loading 
vehicles with cranes, which would be slow and inefficient, vehicles are rolled 
along ramps built into the ship.

Large, conventional RoRo use an average of 40 tons of fuel per day, generating 
120 tons of CO2 -- equivalent to driving a car 270,000 miles.

The shipping industry is under pressure to reduce emissions of CO2 and other 
greenhouse gases. Shipping accounted for 2.89% of global manmade greenhouse gas 
emissions in 2018, according to the International Maritime Organization (IMO), 
the UN body that regulates global shipping. In the same year, the IMO 
introduced a mandatory 50% reduction of total annual greenhouse gas emissions 
by 2050 — with the ambition to reach zero emissions "as soon as possible in 
this century."

Oceanbird is designed to exceed these targets -- Wallenius says the ship will 
emit  90%  less CO2 than conventional car carriers. It won't be completely 
emission-free, however, because it will still rely on engines for manoeuvring 
in and out of ports and for emergencies.

Slow sailing

With a projected top speed of about 10 knots, Oceanbird will be slower than 
standard car carriers, which can travel at 17 knots. It will take around 12 
days, instead of the standard seven, to cross the Atlantic.

This long journey will require some scheduling changes, says Razola, as well as 
acceptance from carmakers. "Of course, there will be challenges and we won't be 
able to do things exactly as we're doing them today, but the response so far 
from manufacturers has been very positive," he says.

Jakob Kuttenkeuler, a professor at Stockholm's Royal Institute of Technology -- 
one of the project's collaborators -- is also optimistic. "People are 
environmentally informed enough now that we think there will be customers 
willing to put their cars on a ship that goes roughly half as fast as today's 
ship, if we can make it carbon neutral," he says.

Kuttenkeuler and his team are working with Wallenius on performance and 
aerodynamics calculations, using weather data to simulate realistic sailing 
conditions. They have built a 7-meter model of Oceanbird which will sail in 
Stockholm's archipelago, later this year, to gather data that will help 
finalize the ship's design.

Razola says it will take around three years, after that, to launch the 
full-size version. "Our ambition is to see Oceanbird sailing in 2024."


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