Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Answer’s a breeze in shippers’ clean-energy quest

- KELVIN CHAN

LONDON — As the shipping industry faces pressure to cut climate-altering greenhouse gases, one answer is blowing in the wind.

European and U.S. tech companies, including one backed by airplane maker Airbus, are pitching futuristic sails to help cargo ships harness the free and endless supply of wind power. While they sometimes don’t even look like sails — some are shaped like spinning columns — they represent a cheap and reliable way to reduce CO2 emissions for an industry that depends on a particular­ly dirty form of fossil fuels.

“It’s an old technology,” said Tuomas Riski, the CEO of Finland’s Norsepower, which added its “rotor sail” technology for the first time to a tanker in August. “Our vision is that sails are coming back to the seas.”

Denmark’s A.P. Moller-Maersk, the world’s biggest shipping company, is using its Maersk Pelican oil tanker to test Norsepower’s 98-foot deck-mounted spinning columns, which convert wind into thrust based on an idea first floated nearly a century ago. Maersk pledged this month to cut carbon emissions to zero by 2050, which will require developing commercial­ly viable carbon neutral vessels by the end of next decade.

The shipping sector’s interest in “sail tech” and other ideas took on greater urgency after the Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on, the U.N.’s maritime agency, reached an agreement in April to slash emissions by 50 percent by 2050.

Transport’s contributi­on to earth-warming emissions is in focus as negotiator­s in Katowice, Poland, gather for U.N. talks to hash out the details of the 2015 Paris accord on curbing global warming.

Shipping, like aviation, isn’t covered by the Paris agreement because of the difficulty attributin­g their emissions to individual nations, but environmen­tal activists say industry efforts are essential to combat climate change. Ships belch out nearly 1 billion tons of carbon dioxide a year, accounting for 2-3 percent of global greenhouse AP/Maersk Tankers/CASPER HARIOT gases. The emissions are projected to grow between 50 percent and 250 percent by 2050 if no action is taken.

Notoriousl­y resistant to change, the maritime shipping industry is facing up to the need to cut its use of cheap but dirty “bunker fuel” that powers the global fleet of 50,000 vessels — the backbone of world trade.

The Internatio­nal Maritime Organizati­on is taking aim more broadly at pollution, requiring ships to start using low-sulfur fuel in 2020 and sending shipowners scrambling to invest in smokestack scrubbers, which clean exhaust, or looking at cleaner but pricier distillate fuels.

A Dutch group, the Goodshippi­ng Program, is trying biofuel, which is made from organic matter. It refueled a container vessel in September with 22,000 liters of used cooking oil on behalf of five customers, in what it called a world first that cut carbon dioxide emissions by 40 tons.

In Norway, efforts to electrify maritime vessels are gathering pace, highlighte­d by the launch of the world’s first all-electric passenger ferry, Future of the Fjords, in April.

Chemical maker Yara is meanwhile planning to build a battery-powered autonomous container ship to ferry fertilizer between plant and port. The Yara Birkeland, scheduled to enter service in 2020, will cut emissions by replacing the trucks currently used to do this job.

Shipowners have to move with the times, said Bjorn Tore Orvik, Yara’s project leader.

Building a convention­al fossil-fueled vessel “is a bigger risk than actually looking to new technologi­es … be-

cause if new legislatio­n suddenly appears then your ship is out of date,” said Orvik.

Batteries are effective for coastal shipping, though not for long-distance sea voyages, so the industry will need to consider other “energy carriers” generated from renewable power, such as hydrogen or ammonia, said Jan Kjetil Paulsen, an adviser at the Bellona Foundation, an environmen­tal non-government organizati­on. Wind power is also feasible, especially if vessels sail more slowly.

“That is where the big challenge lies today,” said Paulsen.

Wind power looks to hold the most promise. The technology behind Norsepower’s rotor sails, also known as Flettner rotors, is based on the principle that airflow speeds up on one side of a spinning object and slows on the other. That creates a force that can be harnessed.

Rotor sails can generate thrust even from wind coming from the side of a ship. German engineer Anton Flettner pioneered the idea in the 1920s but the concept languished because it couldn’t compete with cheap oil.

On a windy day, Norsepower says rotors can replace up to 50 percent of a ship’s engine propulsion. Overall, the company says it can cut fuel consumptio­n by 7 percent to 10 percent.

One big problem with rotors is they get in the way of port cranes that load and unload cargo. To get around that, U.S. startup Magnuss has developed a retractabl­e version. The New York company is raising $10 million to build its concept, which involves two 50-foot steel cylinders that retract below deck.

“It’s just a better mousetrap,” said CEO James Rhodes, who says his target market is the “Panamax” size bulk cargo ships carrying iron ore, coal or grain.

High-tech versions of convention­al sails are also on the drawing board.

Spain’s bound4blue’s aircraft wing-like sail and collapses like an accordion, according to a video of a scaled-down version from a recent trade fair. The first two will be installed next year followed by five more in 2020.

The company is in talks with 15 more ship owners from across Europe, Japan, China and the U.S. to install its technology, said co-founder Cristina Aleixendre­i.

Ship owners are now “more desperate for new technology to reduce fuel consumptio­n,” she said

Airseas, backed by European plane maker Airbus, plans to deploy its parachutel­ike automated kite sails on ships ferrying fuselages from France to Alabama starting in 2020. The company predicts that the “Seawing” will reduce fuel use by 20 percent on the 13-day journey.

 ??  ?? The Maersk Pelican oil tanker is testing Norsepower’s 98-foot deck-mounted spinning columns, which convert wind into thrust.
The Maersk Pelican oil tanker is testing Norsepower’s 98-foot deck-mounted spinning columns, which convert wind into thrust.
 ?? AP/Maersk Tankers/CASPER HARIOT Finnish startup Norsepower installed its rotor sail technology on the Maersk Pelican tanker in late August in Rotterdam, Netherland­s, the first such installati­on on a tanker. ??
AP/Maersk Tankers/CASPER HARIOT Finnish startup Norsepower installed its rotor sail technology on the Maersk Pelican tanker in late August in Rotterdam, Netherland­s, the first such installati­on on a tanker.

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