Boating NZ

RIP diesel?

A bit like Mark Twain who famously declared that media reports of his death were exaggerate­d, so too reports of the demise of the diesel engine might be a little premature.

- BY LAWRENCE SCHÄFFLER

The Diesel Engine’s Future. Many might argue that the diesel has reached the end of the line. Has it?

Anyone monitoring the health of the internatio­nal automotive sector over the last 18 months will be forgiven for thinking that dieselpowe­red vehicles face immediate extinction.

Consider this selection of media headlines: • ‘Historic end’ for combustion: Volvo says all of its cars will use electric after 2019 • India to see only electric cars by 2030 • France wants to ditch gas, diesel-powered cars by 2040 • Britain bans gasoline and diesel cars starting in 2040 • China says it will stop selling internal combustion engine cars • Toyota will electrify entire vehicle lineup by 2025

Everyone’s familiar with the emissions/climate change drivers at play here, and even if you’re sceptical about the science, it does raise an intriguing question: what does a growing anti-diesel brigade mean for the recreation­al marine sector?

In New Zealand – as in many countries – the vast majority of 10m-plus boats are powered by diesel donks. Are these engines – many of them admittedly a little long in the tooth – to be legislated out of existence? Are even the latest-generation engines to be banned from new builds? Well, as always, it depends on who you ask. A somewhat more upbeat perspectiv­e on the diesel engine’s future came earlier this

year at the Intermat Expo in Paris – a massive internatio­nal exhibition targeting the global constructi­on and infrastruc­ture industries.

One of the keynote speakers – Dr Kelly Senecal – is an American engineer and the co-founder of Convergent Science (developers of Converge software). The company specialise­s in CFD (computatio­nal fluid dynamics) simulation­s and, in particular, in ‘virtually’ recreating what happens inside a combustion chamber – when high compressio­n ignites the diesel-air mixture as the piston reaches the top of its stroke.

The automotive industry is one of his major clients and he works closely with engineers on problems related to combustion modelling and other fluid flow phenomena. Thanks to insights gleaned from this research, Senecal preaches a different message about the future of diesel engines.

It goes something like this: “diesel engines are continuous­ly improving and evolving – and have been for many years. They are nowhere near their optimum. With more research, they will run cleaner, with greater efficiency and improved performanc­e. This is a time of opportunit­y for engine manufactur­ers.”

He reminded delegates that while European emissions standards for constructi­on machinery have become progressiv­ely more stringent – beginning with the Stage I regulation­s in the late 1990s – the new Stage V regulation­s (effective next year) will introduce even tighter restrictio­ns on carbon monoxide, hydrocarbo­n and nitrogen oxide emissions.

These will drive significan­t improvemen­ts in the overall efficiency and performanc­e of the diesel engine – and every sector using the engines, including the marine industry – will benefit.

Senecal stresses he is neither anti-alternativ­e fuels nor anti-electric. Indeed, he welcomes the technologi­es and readily concedes that electric and hybrid vehicles will be fundamenta­l to future transporta­tion. But he is adamant that the diesel engine will also be there.

A diesel engine, he says, provides a unique combinatio­n of torque, reliabilit­y and convenienc­e that’s unmatched by other technologi­es, and while electric and hybrid technologi­es are advancing steadily, they also have inherent problems which will have to be addressed.

These include concerns about the viable range of electric vehicles, the time needed to recharge batteries, the relatively underdevel­oped infrastruc­ture of recharging stations – and the need to find a way to decommissi­on and recycle batteries safely and efficientl­y. Crucially, supplies of the vital ingredient­s that go into battery technologi­es – lithium and cobalt – are also limited.

Furthermor­e, battery production is not emission-free, nor is generating electricit­y for recharging batteries. The majority

Diesel engines are continuous­ly improving and evolving – and have been for many years. They are nowhere near their optimum...

Are even the latestgene­ration engines to be banned from new builds?

of the world’s electricit­y generation (around 70 percent) is still produced by fossil fuels – and will be for the foreseeabl­e future. So to present electric or hybrid vehicles as ‘emission-free’ is a little disingenuo­us.

Senecal says the demonisati­on of the diesel engine that followed the 2015 ‘dieselgate scandal’ – when automotive giant VW was found to have fudged its engines’ emissions data – has been politicise­d, to the point where several government­s are proposing an outright ban on petrol- and diesel-powered vehicles. He does not believe this is realistic.

THE WAY FORWARD

Electric and hybrid technologi­es will continue to grow, but with continued R&D, internal combustion engines will become even cleaner and will remain at the heart of motive power for years to come.

“The margins are still there. We have to work towards constant improvemen­t, especially now, as we stand at the cusp of the introducti­on of European Stage V regulation­s.”

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 ??  ?? LEFT Kelly Senecal – reports about the death of the diesel are a little premature.
LEFT Kelly Senecal – reports about the death of the diesel are a little premature.
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