‘Zero Emission’ Ship Powered Only by Battery

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  • Nagasaki-based Oshima Shipbuilding Co Ltd has built an automatic ship powered only by a battery.
  • The ship, “e-Oshima,” is a “zero-emission ship” that uses a storage battery not only to provide a driving power but also supply power to communication/navigation/wireless devices, lighting equipment, air-conditioning systems and all the other devices used at the time of sailing.

Nagasaki-based Oshima Shipbuilding, best known for its range of bulk carriers, has delivered Japan’s first vessel to run solely on battery power, reports Splash247.

e-Oshima

The ferry, e-Oshima, uses a storage battery not only to provide propulsion but also supply power to communication, navigation and wireless devices, lighting equipment, air-conditioning systems and all the other devices used at the time of sailing.

The propulsion system of the ship uses Japan’s GS Yuasa large-capacity lithium-ion storage battery as a main power-supply device. The vessel can be charged in around two and a half hours.

Autonomous Technology

The maximum capacity of the 35 m long ship is 50 people, and it can carry a large-size bus and four passenger cars at the same time. The e-Oshima also features some autonomous technology.

GS Yuasa lithium-ion batteries have been installed in numerous high-profile projects including the International Space Station and the Boeing 787 Dreamliner.

Lithium-ion batteries

Battery-powered landmarks in shipping are now happening thick and fast. Last week, the world’s largest plug-in hybrid vessel was delivered from Ulstein Verft in Norway.

The Color Hybrid joins Color Line’s fleet with a hull championing its green credentials. The vessel is a plug-in hybrid, where the five-megawatt batteries can be charged with shore power in Sandefjord in Norway.

The vessel will go silently in and out of the fjord of Sandefjord without emissions of harmful environmental gases, or nitrogen and sulfur compounds to air in the area. The battery pack weighs 65 tons and can be recharged in one hour.

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Source: Splash247