The Citizen (KZN)

UK sees new breed of ‘green’ narrowboat­s

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Kinver – Motoring down the Staffordsh­ire & Worcesters­hire Canal in England’s West Midlands, Neil Cocksedge’s narrowboat at first sight looks like most other vessels plying the country’s famous network of scenic inland waterways.

But one feature, in particular, gives away that this is no ordinary narrowboat: its stealthy near-silence.

“The thing people notice about the electric boat is it’s so much quieter – we sneak up on fishermen!” Cocksedge told AFP proudly as he piloted it on a recent morning.

Named Eau de Folles – after a now-shuttered Toulouse restaurant where he proposed to his wife decades ago – the 20-monthold vessel is among a small but growing number propelled to varying degrees by electricit­y.

Batteries powering the engine and on-board appliances – including an oven, fridge and kettle – are recharged by solar panels on the roof, canalside charging points or a fuel-fed generator.

It can manage a day’s cruising on primarily solar-generated power and, overall, uses a quarter of the diesel that traditiona­l narrowboat­s guzzle, according to Cocksedge.

The 70-year-old retired steel industry executive is among those pioneering a switch to environmen­tally friendly narrowboat­s, after more than a century of diesel-powered boats on Britain’s pleasure cruising-dominated canals.

The slow shift is being driven by increasing­ly eco-conscious owners, financial incentives, increased exposure of canal lifestyles online – and the added bonus of less noisy engines.

“We wanted to try and be as green as possible and also we like the quietness,” explained Cocksedge, who bought the bespoke boat in May 2022 for leisure trips during warmer months.

“There’s very few electric narrowboat­s around at the moment. They are gaining popularity though,” he added.

Britain experience­d its canal-building boom in the late 1700s when they were used to haul cargo, spurring the industrial revolution. But over the next century, they were largely supplanted by railways.

England and Wales still boast around 3 219km of navigable canals and linked rivers, with the West Midlands the epicentre.

Birmingham, its biggest city, proclaims to have more miles of canals than Venice.

Much of the network is often just 2.1 metres wide, giving rise to Britain’s so-called narrowboat­s.

Crossing idyllic countrysid­e as well as urban areas, they have enjoyed a resurgence in recent decades as a place to live, as well as for leisure.

But as the UK bids to decarbonis­e its transport and other sectors, attention has turned to the vast majority of narrowboat­s belching out diesel fumes.

“Because they last for so long... they tend to put out quite a lot of smutty smoke,” said Cocksedge, noting the vessels typically host “old agricultur­al-type engines that have been marinised”, converted for use in boats.

The government wants all maritime vessels to show from next year how they could be altered to meet the country’s 2050 zero emissions target.

The Canal & River Trust, a charity which cares for the inland waterways, is encouragin­g uptake of electric-powered narrowboat­s.

It offers “greener” boat owners 25% discounts on mandatory annual licences, and is also partnering in pilot schemes to install charging points at inner-city moorings.

It currently licences around 35 000 boats in England and Wales, but only around one percent claim the discount, underlinin­g what it calls the “massive undertakin­g” ahead. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? REVOLUTION. Neil Cocksedge, owner of a hybrid narrowboat named Eau de Folies, pulls his holiday boat on the mooring of the Ashwood marina, central England.
Picture: AFP REVOLUTION. Neil Cocksedge, owner of a hybrid narrowboat named Eau de Folies, pulls his holiday boat on the mooring of the Ashwood marina, central England.

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