The Scotsman

Undersea robotics aid offshore wind markets

Lee Wilson (left) and Lucas Wissmann

-

For the offshore wind industry, robots and autonomous system capabiliti­es are evolving at a breathtaki­ng pace. In the coming years, we will see remote-controlled robots being deployed into choppy seas to conduct operations and maintenanc­e for wind turbines. These technologi­es create a new way of working that is safer, cleaner and more scalable for the growing offshore wind market, which is set to see a staggering increase of around 30,000 offshore wind turbines globally by 2030.

As the offshore wind market expands, operations will be pushed further offshore and into ever deeper waters. Sending humans into these hazardous conditions where work would be intermitte­ntly restricted to brief weather windows is no longer sustainabl­e. Each time a human crew is deployed offshore for simple tasks, as much as 500 tonnes of CO2 is emitted by today’s diesel-powered vessels.

Recent research from the Offshore Renewable Energy (ORE) Catapult, the UK’S leading innovation and research centre for offshore renewable energy, found that the offshore wind O&M market is expected to increase by £22 billion between 2030 and 2050, with robotics accounting for at least £8.4bn of that total.

The founders of Honuworx understood the traditiona­l model for subsea robotics operations could not be sustainabl­y scaled to underpin the continuing growth of blue economy sectors like offshore wind. Research supports this, highlighti­ng that a basic 21-day inspection mission may run up to £1.5m.

Honuworx envisioned a future where subsea robots would instead be deployed from an all-electric, autonomous mothership. Harnessing their expertise in engineerin­g and autonomous underwater systems, the company joined forces with ORE Catapult, as part of an Innovate Uk-funded project.

Honuworx is starting its assault on large vessels with ‘Ridley’ - a towable mothership designed to deploy large robotic systems. Ridley can be paired with a much smaller vessel, significan­tly reducing cost and emissions.

But as the offshore wind market continues to grow, solutions must advance with pace, which is why Honuworx has plans in place for an advanced mothership, which removes the vessel dependency entirely.

‘Loggerhead’ will provide a mobile power and communicat­ion hub for other subsea robots using satellite, 4G, 5G, special communicat­ions and control software. This advanced mothership stays subsea as it navigates to offshore worksites to deploy its robotic workers. The allelectri­c approach uses variable levels of autonomy by periodical­ly connecting to shore-based networks and crews using a communicat­ions buoy to share data and seek instructio­ns.

The Loggerhead concept has been highlighte­d by ORE Catapult as one that promises to resolve the remaining barriers to the adoption of subsea robotics in the offshore wind industry in terms of cost, carbon footprint, battery life at sea and digital connectivi­ty.

With Honuworx, the offshore energy sector can tackle the three main challenges around cost reduction, safety improvemen­t and operationa­l integratio­n to ensure decades of continued growth for the sector.

Lee Wilson, Co-founder & CEO and Lucas Wissmann, Co-founder & Commerical Director, Honuworx

 ?? ?? 0 ‘Loggerhead’ which acts as a mothership
0 ‘Loggerhead’ which acts as a mothership
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom