Khaleej Times

Unmanned ships to hit seas

- Jessica Shankleman

london — It’s not just in Google laboratori­es that the revolution in electric, driverless transporta­tion is gathering pace: a Norwegian shipping company is aiming to be able to deliver cargoes by sea on unmanned vessels from 2020.

The fully electric, zero emissions Yara Birkeland will set sail next year in Europe, Oslo-based Yara Internatio­nal said on Saturday. By 2019, it will be able to work by remote control and at the start of the next decade, it will be able to deliver on a fully automated basis. The container ship, being built by Kongsberg Gruppen, will transport fertiliser.

A breakthrou­gh by Yara could have far-reaching implicatio­ns for the maritime industry, which has historical­ly consumed the dirtiest fuels available from refineries.

Yara uses more than 100 diesel truck journeys a day to haul products from its Porsgrunn plant in Norway to the domestic ports of Brevik and Larvik from where it ships to customers around the world, said Svein Tore Holsether, CEO of Yara.

Yara estimates that the new vessel will reduce truck-powered haulage by 40,000 journeys a year, although the journeys in question are a fraction of those taken by convention­al internatio­nal shipping.

While shipping lanes contain less traffic than on-land roads, maritime trade still comes with its own complicati­ons that will provide challenges for automation. Those include strong ocean currents, bad weather and piracy.

The new vessel will allow Kongsburg to test out new technology that could ultimately curb pollution from the shipping industry, which accounts for about 2.3 per cent of global emissions. The Internatio­nal Maritime Organisati­on plans to release an initial plan next year to cut greenhouse gases as the industry isn’t included in the Paris Agreement. — Bloomberg

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