The Herald

Olympian bids for plane-style ferries

A sailing champion is developing an underwater plane reducing fuel costs by 90 per cent using electric motors instead of diesel engines, writes Alison Meikle

-

A DOUBLE Olympic gold medallist is skippering an attempt to make the UK a world leader in zero-emissions passenger ferries.

Sailing champion Iain Percy is combining his know-how from designing America’s Cup racing yachts with expertise from the maritime, aerospace and F1 racing industries to develop what he calls a “plane underwater”.

Southampto­n-born Mr Percy, 43, has chosen Belfast – a city with a rich ship and aircraft building heritage – as the location for the eco-friendly hydrofoil technology.

His consortium, which includes leading manufactur­ers such as Bombardier UK and universiti­es and local councils in Northern Ireland, is vying for a £30 million Government grant to part-fund a £60m research and developmen­t project.

The green-energy ferries will use the same hydrofoil technology that has transforme­d America’s Cup sailing in the last decade.

The boat will have hydrofoil “wings” under the surface of the water that are attached to the hull with vertical struts.

Much like a plane taking off on a runway, the wings drive the hull up and out of the water as the vessel picks up speed.

That enables the craft to travel with its entire hull, bar the wing struts, raised above the waves – thus reducing drag, and fuel costs, by a dramatic 90 per cent.

With significan­tly less energy required to cut through the water, the ferries no longer need the power of traditiona­l diesel engines, and can instead operate with small electric motors similar to those used in Formula E racing cars.

Mr Percy said the aim is to generate that electricit­y from renewable sources, thus creating a zero-emissions craft.

The hydrofoils can also be retro-fitted to existing ferries to transform their energy use.

Mr Percy said: “Think of a boat sitting on top of an aeroplane is the best way to describe it.

“We all know that when we are sitting on a plane and we go down the runway, eventually a combinatio­n of going faster and the wings having their flaps down, the plane eventually takes off.

“It’s no different than that underwater, only water is a lot denser than air – 1,000 times denser – so the wings themselves are a lot smaller.”

Mr Percy is the chief executive of Artemis Technologi­es, a spin-off of the

America’s Cup team Artemis Racing.

He won sailing gold at the 2000 Sydney and 2008 Beijing Olympics, on the second occasion alongside life-long friend Andrew Simpson, who later died in a sailing accident in America in 2013.

Artemis is leading the Belfast Maritime Consortium – a group that includes Belfast and Ards and North Down councils, Belfast Harbour, Queen’s University, Ulster University, Belfast Metropolit­an College, Bombardier UK, Catalyst, Creative Composites, Energia, and the Northern Ireland Advanced

Composites’ and Engineerin­g Centre. With Bombardier’s hi-tech wingmanufa­cturing plant sitting adjacent to Belfast’s expansive shipyards, Mr Percy said the city is the perfect location for a business that combined both industries.

“We are effectivel­y a wing in the water, so we’re a perfect marriage of those two industries and Belfast is uniquely placed to really world lead in what’s going to be a new transforma­tive technology,” he said.

“This is a real transforma­tive technology and because of that the growth can be huge.

“We believe that from here in Belfast there can be a huge export-led business that can make a real difference to emissions globally.”

The consortium is through to the final round of a competitiv­e process to secure support through the Government’s

Think of a boat sitting on top of an aeroplane is the best way to describe it

new Strength In Places innovation fund.

It is the only Northern Ireland bid still in the mix for a grant and the only maritime-focused project.

Unlike several of the other bids, the consortium is also underpinne­d by a significan­t financial commitment

– £30m – from its commercial members.

Mr Percy, who was made an OBE in 2009, said he hopes for a positive result when the final Strength In Places awards are announced in the coming weeks.

“I started as a sailor competing in multiple Olympics and America’s Cups but slowly migrated more to the technical side of our sport,” he said.

“Sailing has been zero-emissions and transporti­ng our goods for thousands of years, so to be able to return to zero-emissions maritime transporta­tion is something I am very passionate about and it was a natural next step.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Iain Percy is leading the bid to win a £30m grant to help develop passenger ferries that use hydrofoil technology. Above, the champ goes racing
Iain Percy is leading the bid to win a £30m grant to help develop passenger ferries that use hydrofoil technology. Above, the champ goes racing

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom