A Comeback of Wind Power in Shipping: An Economic and Operational Review on the Wind-Assisted Ship Propulsion Technology
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Environmental Regulatory Context and WASP Technologies
2.1. Regulatory Developments toward Decarbonization
2.2. WASP Technology and Its Role in Greening the Maritime Industry
3. Adaptation of WASP Technology and Demonstrated Economic Impact
3.1. Uptakes of the WASP Technology
3.2. Economic Impact—Fuel Saving
- Parameterization of the physics of a wind-assisted ship and its WASP technology,
- Parameterization of the performance of a wind-assisted ship taking weather variability into account,
- Aggregation of performance data from multiple simulations.
- The first approach is a non-route-based simulation [63,64,65,66], which makes assumptions about parameters of modeled technologies, ships, and weather conditions based on literature and databases, calculates net energy output of the technologies in a simulation model, and translates the net energy output to fuel saving.
- The third approach not relies on simulation but also requires measured fuel consumption data from ships sailing with WASP technology. The amount of fuel saving is found by switching the technology on and off in identical sea and wind conditions [70] and comparing the amount of fuel consumption.
4. Operating Considerations
4.1. Environmental Factors
4.2. On-Board and Commercial Factors
4.3. Indicative Comparison among the WASP Technologies
5. Concluding Remarks
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Research | Key Strengths and Advantages of the WASP Technology |
[8] | 10–40% improvement in the EEOI (along with improved block coefficient) |
[22] | 1–50% CO2 emission reduction (ranked third in alternative fuels and energy) |
[29] | 1–32% CO2 emission reduction; applications could be combined |
[24] | 2–60% fuel saving; particularly suitable for high sea shipping |
[23] | No infrastructure required; proven technology from long-term development |
[27] | High cost-effectiveness (negative marginal abatement cost) |
Ship Name | Ship Type | DWT | Technology Characteristics | Ship Built Year c | Installation Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Flettner-Rotor | No. of Rotors/Diameter (m)/Height (m) | ||||
E-Ship 1 a | General Cargo/Ro-Lo | 10,020 | 4/4/27 | 2010 | 2010 |
Estraden a | Ro-Ro | 9700 | 2/3 b/18 | 1999 | 2014 |
Viking Grace a | Passenger | 6107 c | 1/4/24 | 2013 | 2018 |
Fehn Pollux a | General Cargo | 4250 | 1/3/18 | 1997 | 2018 |
Maersk Pelican a,b | Tanker | 109,647 | 2/5/30 | 2008 | 2018 |
Afros d | Bulk Carrier | 64,000 | 4/-/- | 2018 | 2018 |
Copenhagen e | Ferry | 5088 | 1/5/30 | 2012 | 2020 |
Annika Braren f | General Cargo | 5100 | 1/18/3 | 2020 | Oct 2020 expected |
SC Connector g | Ro-Ro | 8843 | 2/35/5 | 1997 | Q4 2020 expected |
Kite | Kite’s dimension (m2) | ||||
Michael A. h | General Cargo | 4884 | 160 | 1994 | 2008 |
BBC Skysails i | General Cargo | 9832 | 320 i | 2008 | 2008 j |
Theseus i | General Cargo | 3667 | 160 g | 2009 | 2009 h |
Aghia Marina i | Bulk Carrier | 28,522 | 320 i | 1994 | 2012 j |
Ville de Bordeaux k,l | Ro-Ro | 5200 | 500 | 2004 | Nov 2020 expected |
TBA k | Bulk Carrier | TBA (Capesize) | 1000 | TBA | 2021 expected |
Suction Wing | No. of wings/height (m) | ||||
Ankie m | General Cargo | 3600 | 2/10 | 2007 | 2020 |
Frisian Sea n | General Cargo | 6477 | 2/TBA | 2013 | 2020 |
Rigid sails/wing sails | No. of foils/height (m)/width (m) | ||||
MV Tharsis o | General Cargo | 2364 | 2/9/3 | 2012 | 2021 expected |
New Vitality p,q | Tanker | 306,751 | 2/32/15 | 2018 | 2018 |
TBAr | Tanker | TBA(VLCC) | TBA | 2022 | 2022 |
Study | Dimensions of the Technology | Ship Type | Route | Fuel Savings Found |
---|---|---|---|---|
[62] | Unspecified | 10K dwt Chemical Tanker | Buenos Aires–Western Approaches | 10–50% |
[7] | 1 Flettner rotor: height (h) = 0 35 m, diameter (d) = 5 m | 7k dwt Ro-Ro 8k dwt Product Tanker 6k dwt General Cargo 50k dwt Bulk Carrier 30k dwt Container Ship | Dunkirk–Dover London–Milford Haven Varberg–Gillingham Tubarao–Grimsby Yantian–Felixstowe | 4% 14% 21% 5% 2% |
[6] | 2 Flettner rotors: h = 22 m, d = 3 m 3 Flettner rotors: h = 48 m, d = 6 m 2 Flettner rotors: h = 24 m, d = 3.5 m 2 Flettner rotors: h = 48 m, d = 6 m | 5k dwt Tanker 90k dwt Tanker 7k dwt Bulk Carrier 90k dwt Bulk Carrier | Worldwide trades of each ship type according to AIS data | 5–7% 9–13% 5–7% 17–23% |
[67] | 1 Flettner rotors: h = 25 m, d = 4 m | 17k dwt General Cargo | Baltimore–Wilhelmshaven | 14–36% |
[63] | 2 Flettner rotors: h = 28 m, d = 4 m | 75k dwt Product Tanker | N.A. | Up to 30% |
[42] | 4 Flettner rotors: h = 27 m, d = 4 m 2 Flettner rotors: h = 18 m, d = 4 m 1 Flettner rotor: h = 24 m, d = 4 m 1 Flettner rotor: h = 18 m, d = 3 m 2 Flettner rotors: h = 30 m, d = 5 m | 10k dwt General Cargo/Ro-Lo 10k dwt Ro-Ro 6k dwt (2.8k pax) Passenger 4k dwt General Cargo 110k dwt Tanker | Porto–Montevideo; Eemshaven–Porto Rotterdam–Middlesbrough Stockholm–Turku Livorno–Mostaganem; Huelva–Alexandria Skikda–Singapore; Yeosu–Spain | 8.3–47% 1.6–9.0% 0.4–2.8% 1.0–6.6% 1.8–4.7% |
[68] | 1 Flettner rotor: h = 18 m, d = 3 m | Aframax Tanker | Cape Lopez–Point Tupper Angra dos Reis–Rotterdam | 8.9% 6.5% |
[70] | 1 Flettner rotor: h = 18 m, d = 3 m | 4k dwt General Cargo | Unspecified | 10–20% |
Study | Dimensions of the Technology | Ship Type | Route | Fuel Savings Found |
---|---|---|---|---|
[65] | 1 kite: area (a) = 500 m2, length of the rope (l) = 150 m | 50k dwt Tanker | N.A. | Up to 35% |
1 kite: area (a) = 500 m2, length of the rope (l) = 350 m | Up to 50% | |||
[66] | 1 kite: a = 640 m2, l = 600 m | 73k dwt Tanker | N.A. | 40% |
[7] | 1 kite: a = 500 m2, l = 350 m | 7k dwt RoRo | Dunkirk–Dover | 3% |
8k dwt Product Tanker | London–Milford Haven | 24% | ||
6k dwt General Cargo | Varberg–Gillingham | 32% | ||
50k dwt Bulk Carrier | Tubarao–Grimsby | 6% | ||
30k dwt Container Ship | Yantian–Felixstowe | 1% | ||
[6] | 1 kite: a = 400 m2, l = 350m | 5k dwt Tanker | Worldwide trades of each ship type according to AIS data | 9–15% |
90k dwt Tanker | 3–4% | |||
7k dwt Bulk Carrier | 9–14% | |||
90k dwt Bulk Carrier | 5–9% | |||
1k teu Container Ship | 2–4% | |||
5k teu Container Ship | 1–2% | |||
[64] | 1 kite: a = 320 m2, l = 300m | 50k dwt Tanker | N.A. | 10–50% |
Study | Dimensions of the Technology | Ship Type | Route | Fuel Savings Found |
---|---|---|---|---|
[69] | 9 wingsails: height (h) = 50 m, width (w) = 20 m | 180k dwt Bulk Carrier | Yokohama–Seattle | 20–30% |
[62] | Unspecified | 10K dwt Chemical Tanker | Buenos Aires–Western Approaches | 20–60% |
[6] | 3 wingsails: h = 25 m, w = 9 m 5 wingsails: h = 50 m, w = 17 m 3 wingsails: h = 27 m, w = 10 m 5 wingsails: h = 50 m, w = 18 m | 5k dwt Tanker 90k dwt Tanker 7k dwt Bulk Carrier 90k dwt Bulk Carrier | Worldwide trades of each ship type according to AIS data | 5–8% 9–13% 5–7% 18–24% |
[68] | 1 wingsail: h = 50 m, w = 20 m | Aframax Tanker | Cape Lopez–Point Tupper Angra dos Reis–Rotterdam | 8.8% 6.1% |
Study | Dimensions of the Technology | Ship Type | Route | Fuel Savings Found |
---|---|---|---|---|
[62] | 1 Dynarig | 10K dwt Chemical Tanker | Buenos Aires–Western Approaches | 15–35% |
[68] | 1 Dynarig: area = 1000 m2 | Aframax Tanker | Cape Lopez–Point Tupper Angra dos Reis–Rotterdam | 5.6% 4.2% |
Study | Dimensions of the Technology | Ship Type | Route | Fuel Savings Found |
[6] | 1 turbine: height (h) = 20 m, diameter (d) = 38 m 3 turbines: h = 20 m, d = 38 m 1 turbine: h = 20 m, d = 38 m 3 turbines: h = 20 m, d = 38 m | 5k dwt Tanker 90k dwt Tanker 7k dwt Bulk Carrier 90k dwt Bulk Carrier | Worldwide trades of each ship type according to AIS data | 1–2% 1–2% 1–2% 2–4% |
Environmental Factors Effect on the wind energy available to be utilized by the WASP technology |
|
On-board Factors Effect on how effective the WASP technology is operated |
|
Commercial Factors Effect on the compatibility of the WASP technology with the ship’s commercial commitments |
|
Kites | Flettner-Rotors | ||
Wind power utilization | Absolute Power | Stronger winds at higher altitude | Slower winds on lower altitude |
Volatility of Power | Most effective with wind aligning with navigation direction | Wider range of wind directions | |
Scalability | Less scalability compared with rotors | Power output increases linearly with number of installations | |
Wind direction | Most effective with tailwinds | Most effective with winds from side | |
Compatibility with ship operation | Less deck space needed | Fundamental deck construction |
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Chou, T.; Kosmas, V.; Acciaro, M.; Renken, K. A Comeback of Wind Power in Shipping: An Economic and Operational Review on the Wind-Assisted Ship Propulsion Technology. Sustainability 2021, 13, 1880. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041880
Chou T, Kosmas V, Acciaro M, Renken K. A Comeback of Wind Power in Shipping: An Economic and Operational Review on the Wind-Assisted Ship Propulsion Technology. Sustainability. 2021; 13(4):1880. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041880
Chicago/Turabian StyleChou, Todd, Vasileios Kosmas, Michele Acciaro, and Katharina Renken. 2021. "A Comeback of Wind Power in Shipping: An Economic and Operational Review on the Wind-Assisted Ship Propulsion Technology" Sustainability 13, no. 4: 1880. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041880
APA StyleChou, T., Kosmas, V., Acciaro, M., & Renken, K. (2021). A Comeback of Wind Power in Shipping: An Economic and Operational Review on the Wind-Assisted Ship Propulsion Technology. Sustainability, 13(4), 1880. https://doi.org/10.3390/su13041880