Tue 12 May 2015, 09:52 GMT

Award for world's first large fully electric vessel


Battery-driven car ferry is owned and operated by Norled.



Ampere, the world's first large fully electric vessel, has received the Seatrade Clean Shipping award for 2015.

Owned and operated by Norled, and designed and constructed by Fjellstrand, the DNV GL-classed car ferry is a fully battery-driven catamaran made of aluminium.

The 80-metre-long vessel is able to carry 120 cars and 360 passengers across the Sognefjord between the villages of Lavik and Oppedal in Norway.

The award was accepted by Sigvald Breivik, Technical Director of Norled, on behalf of the project partners. "Norled are proud to be the first ferry operator to operate the world's first zero emission ferry," he said.

"We are honoured to have been part of the Ampere project and to have received this award,” remarked Narve Mjøs, Director Battery Services & Projects at DNV GL - Maritime. "This has been a very exciting project to work on and we were very pleased that we could help to realise the vision of Norled and Fjellstrand. Vessels such as the Ampere demonstrate how the industry can use existing technologies to improve its impact on the environment, while at the same time maintaining economic operations."

Ampere was christened by Norwegian minister of Trade and Industry, Monica Mæland, at the Fjellstrand yard in October 2014 and is one of three ferries operated by Norled on the route between Lavik and Oppedal. The ferry runs 34 times each day, with a crossing time of 20 minutes. Between trips the 1-megawatt-hour(MWh) lithium-polymer battery pack on board can be charged in ten minutes. As the power required to charge the vessel is beyond the capacity of the electrical grid serving the villages of Lavik and Oppedal, battery buffers have been installed at both ports. These buffer batteries can be continuously charged from the grid to provide a quick charge to the ferry's batteries.

Compared to a standard diesel ferry serving the same route, the Ampere is estimated to save about one million litres of fuel annually, as well as preventing 2,640 tonnes of carbon dioxide from entering the atmosphere. Emissions of particulate matter, nitrous oxide (NOx) and sulphur oxide (SOx) are also eliminated.

According to DNV GL, in economic terms, battery hybridisation of ferries can provide potential fuel cost savings of 10 percent to 30 percent, with a payback time of three to five years, while all-electric ferries can produce fuel cost savings of 50 percent to 80 percent.

The combination of the slim aluminium catamaran hull and propulsion system of 2 x 450 kilowatt (kW) Azimuth thrusters and 2 x 450 kW electric motors means the Ampere is optimised for energy efficiency, while at the same time giving the vessel very good low speed and manoeuvring characteristics, DNV GL says.

Ampere has the DNV GL class notation 1A1 LC R4 (nor) Car Ferry C Battery Power. The battery power notation is mandatory for vessels that use batteries as one of their main sources - or the sole source - of energy for propulsion.

DNV GL has developed several tools to help the spread of battery and electric, such as tentative class rules for battery power, a guideline for large maritime battery systems, a new tool for qualifying battery related systems, a battery ready service (technical, economic and environmental performance analyses), battery sizing and optimisation tools and an introduction course to maritime battery systems.

It is not the first time the industry has honoured the Ampere. During the SMM shipping exhibition in Hamburg, the Norwegian shipping magazine 'Skipsrevyen' gave the annual 'Ship of the year' award to the Ampere's owners, designers and yard.

Image: The Ampere - the world's first large fully electric vessel, owned and operated by Norled.


IBIA MFM bunkering training course graphic. IBIA announces new date for mass flow meter training course in Rotterdam  

Training scheduled for 12 May follows mandatory MFM implementation at Rotterdam and Antwerp-Bruges ports.

A Maersk vessel, pictured from above. Maersk and Hapag-Lloyd suspend Strait of Hormuz transits amid Middle East security crisis  

Container carriers reroute services around the Cape of Good Hope as military conflict escalates.

Map of Middle East. Operations continue as normal at most Middle East ports  

Most facilities operating normally, with exceptions in Bahrain, Oman and Saudi Arabia.

Photograph of the 93,000-cbm very large ammonia carrier (VLAC) Gaz Ronin. Naftomar takes delivery of 93,000-cbm dual-fuel ammonia carrier  

Gaz Ronin features a MAN dual-fuel engine with high-pressure selective catalytic reduction technology.

Aurora Botnia leaving harbor. AYK Energy completes world’s largest marine battery retrofit on Wasaline ferry  

Aurora Botnia receives 10.4 MWh battery system, bringing total capacity to 12.6 MWh.

Steel cutting ceremony for an LNG dual-fuel 307,000-tonne crude oil tanker with builder's hull no. 113. Dalian Shipbuilding begins construction on LNG dual-fuel crude tanker  

Development is one of a number of milestones reported by parent company over the past few days.

Photograph of Sallaum Lines' Ocean Breeze vessel with 'Introducing The Blue Corridor' overlaid text. Sallaum Lines launches Blue Corridor sustainability initiative for Europe–Africa ro-ro trade  

Company deploys LNG-capable vessels with AI routing and eco-speed protocols on new green shipping corridor.

The platform supply vessel Viking Energy. Eidesvik Offshore signs yard contract for ammonia retrofit of PSV Viking Energy  

Halsnøy Dokk to convert platform supply vessel as part of EU-backed Apollo project.

Vanquish tanker alongside Jette Theresa oil/chemical tanker docked at terminal. North Sea Port completes risk analysis for alternative fuel bunkering operations  

Port authority says LNG, hydrogen, methanol and ammonia can be safely refuelled across its facilities.

Container ship near a port. Ammonia emerges as most feasible alternative fuel for deep-sea shipping in 2050 emissions study  

Research combining expert survey and technical analysis ranks ammonia ahead of hydrogen and methanol.