Were electric ferries not a viable option?

  • Buelldozer
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    165 days ago

    The new ship carries 20% more people and 40% more cars while having lower NO and SO emissions. It will have more methane emissions simply because it uses that fuel and the old ferry didn’t, which is a good chunk of the reason it’s “CO2 Equivalent” emissions seem high.

    The article does a great job of not telling the reader about emissions per mile between the old ship and the new one, nor does it tell you the emissions per passenger mile, both of which are vital to know if the new ship is a net benefit.

  • @[email protected]
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    5 days ago

    Were electric ferries not a viable option?

    For short routes, they are.

    Here in Estonia, two ferries that sail to the island Saaremaa (route Kuivastu-Virtsu, about 4 nautical miles so really short) …they typically charge in port and travel on battery power. They have a combustion engine of course, and can use it when ice is thick (which lately hasn’t been the case, and this year is ridiculous, it’s January soon and there even no snow, not to speak of sea ice).

    https://news.err.ee/1609198900/40-million-procurement-underway-for-larger-electric-vessel-to-serve-saaremaa

    The power grid connection at the port was redesigned of course. Charging a ship requires more amps than an ordinary port might have access to.

    But how long is the Arran sea route? Sources give me different numbers and on the map, I can’t figure out which port they actually prefer to sail from. Either way, it looks manageable on battery power.

    • @[email protected]
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      45 days ago

      They are meant for the Ardrossan-Brodick service. However that would still make them among the largest battery powered ships in the world and the longest route. Ships like the Yara Birkeland have 13NM routes for daily service. However hybrid would be a great option.

  • celeste
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    56 days ago

    I guess in 2017, when they started the project, electric wasn’t a good option? And they overestimated the positives of the fuel it was designed for.

      • @t_chalco
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        5 days ago

        When monies followed the US/CAN LTO glut, about three years earlier, and vested interest groups pushed the crap as a “green” solution to coal and crude. :grumble grumble grumble:

      • Atelopus-zeteki
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        45 days ago

        It has always seemed and continues to seem the best option to natural gas executives.

  • DarkThoughts
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    45 days ago

    I don’t understand why it is called “green”? It’s using natural gas as fuel.

    • Atelopus-zeteki
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      25 days ago

      It’s being called “green” for reasons unrelated in any way to best environmental practices.