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It’s not just planes, trains, and automobiles switching to
alternative energy sources. The world’s 50,000 diesel-powered
containerships- which haul 90 percent of all good- are looking for ways
to go green too. This fall Germany’s top shipping firm, Beluga, will
launch its latest containership with a clean-tech twist: a giant kite
that flies 1,000 feet above the bow, connected to an automated
telescoping mast. Wind power won’t displace the ship’s giant diesel
engines, but it will take a load off, slashing fuel consumption by as
much as 30 percent.
The SkySails kite, names for the Hamburg-bases startup that
created it, is the first modern commercial application of an old
concept. Japanese shipper experimented with wind-assisted vessels in
the 1980s after a spike in oil prices. But with today’s fuel costs
already sky-high and likely to keep raising, and carbon emissions from
the shipping industry set to jump 75 percent by 2027, hybrid freighters
may soon become a permanent fixture. Stephan Wrage, SkySails’s
33-year-old founder, says he’s targeting cargo vessels, oil tankers,
fish trawlers, and big yachts. Wrage hopes to add more commercial
clients – including the biggest yachts of all, passenger cruise ships –
if Beluga sails through its sea trails this summer without mishap.
From Business 2.0 May 2007 by Jeffrey Davis |