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28  SUSTAINABILITY SPECIAL                                                                                              29







                                                         DAMEN PRODUCT DIRECTOR FERRIES, HENK

                                                         GRUNSTRA, ON DAMEN’S MOVE INTO THE

                                                         WORLD OF ELECTRIC PROPULSION FOR
                                                         MARINE-BASED PUBLIC TRANSPORTATION.


 ELECTRIC CROSSING














                                                         The electrification of ships is no longer just a prospect for the future; electrification
                                                         is here. Right now, as part of its E-Cross Ferries programme Damen is constructing
                                                         electric ferries of all sizes, from passenger only to those able to carry vehicles. These
                                                         cutting-edge vessels feature the entire spectrum of current propulsion options –
                                                         from diesel-electric with on board power generation to fully electric using a shore-
                                                         based power source.

                                                        “This is not to say we’ve got this covered; electrification is one steep learning curve.
                                                         Electrification of ships is new, but with the E-Cross series, we’ve made a good
                                                         start,” says Damen Product Director Ferries Henk Grunstra.
                                                         Firm foundations in ferries
                                                         Certainly ferries present a good starting point – the predictable nature of their
                                                         operations, working to a regular route and schedule – allows a shipyard to tailor
                                                         the propulsion exactly to the vessel’s operational profile. This predictability is
                                                         critical for developing vessels with electric propulsion.

                                                        “During the design process for one electric ferry, the client came back to us and
                                                         said, ‘Actually, we’ve decided we want to change the route, it’s now this’,” he says
                                                         gesturing. “The change was a 31% extension of the route. So we went back to the
                                                         drawing board to see what we could do. The answer was not quite so simple as
                                                         you might imagine. The new profile required completely different batteries, in turn
                                                         requiring an almost completely different boat. It’s early days for this technology
                                                         right now. The slightest change to the plans sets off a chain reaction that can
                                                         threaten cost increases and jeopardise redundancy.”

                                                         Neither of which outcomes is much of an option. Increased costs are likely to make
                                                         electrification less popular in both public and private sectors, while redundancy is
                                                         critical in a vessel that is, essentially, a lifeline for communities, as Henk explains.
                                                        “If there’s a storm and it takes out the power, then people still need to get to
                                                         hospital.”

                                                         The predictability of a ferry operation, however, brings its own challenges.
                                                         Marine-based public transport invariably requires a customised approach. Each
                                                         operation is unique – it has its own route and its vessels their own capacity and size
                                                         requirements, for which the right-sized batteries must be selected.
                                                        “For example, we approached a project in Canada with a view to using docking
                                                         solutions we had seen successfully applied in Norway, but it turned out that they
                                                         just were not suitable for this project. Although the operations of each ferry are
                                                         predictable and routine, they are also unique to the route that they serve.”
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