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Sea change ahead with autonomous ships

It sounds like a ghost story: A huge cargo vessel sails up and down the Norwegian coast, silently going about its business, without a captain or crew in sight. But if all goes as planned, it is actually the future of shipping.

A computer simulation showing the Yara Birkeland, the world’s first fully electric and utonomous container ship. Although it can be operated remotely by a pilot, it will also be able to cruise on its own, using sensors, cameras and navigation tools. Photo: AFP

A computer simulation showing the Yara Birkeland, the world’s first fully electric and utonomous container ship. Although it can be operated remotely by a pilot, it will also be able to cruise on its own, using sensors, cameras and navigation tools. Photo: AFP

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It sounds like a ghost story: A huge cargo vessel sails up and down the Norwegian coast, silently going about its business, without a captain or crew in sight. But if all goes as planned, it is actually the future of shipping.

Last week, Kongsberg Gruppen ASA, a Norwegian maritime-technology firm, and Yara ASA, a fertiliser manufacturer, announced a partnership to build the world’s first fully autonomous cargo containership.

Manned voyages will start next year, and in 2020, the Yara Birkeland will set sail all on its own. It is the beginning of a revolution that should transform one of the world’s oldest and most conservative industries — and make global shipping safer, faster and cleaner than it has ever been.

The commercial rationale for autonomous ships has long been clear. The United States Coast Guard has estimated that human error accounts for up to 96 per cent of all marine casualties.

A recent surge in piracy is a grim reminder that crews remain vulnerable (and valuable) targets for international criminals. Perhaps unsurprisingly, the industry is facing a chronic shortage of skilled workers who want a career at sea.

By one consultant’s estimate, moreover, carrying sailors accounts for 44 per cent of a ship’s costs. That is not just salaries: Crew quarters, air-conditioning units, a bridge (which typically requires heavy ballast to ensure a ship’s balance) and other amenities take up valuable weight and space that might otherwise be used for cargo. And that dead weight contributes to a bigger problem: Maritime shipping accounts for about 2.5 per cent of global greenhouse-gas emissions. Barring a radical change, those emissions are set to surge in the decades ahead.

All this explains why eliminating a crew and its costs has been a long-time goal for companies and governments around the world. The most advanced effort so far has come from Rolls-Royce, which rolled out a virtual-reality prototype of an autonomous ship in 2014. According to the company, the ship will be 5 per cent lighter and burn up to 15 per cent less fuel than a comparable vessel with humans aboard.

That effort has been the subject of considerable scepticism — especially from seafarer unions who doubt that technology can replace experienced sailors, and note that the International Maritime Organisation (IMO), the United Nations agency that oversees shipping, prohibits crewless operations. But what seemed impossible three years ago is quickly becoming reality. Most of the sensor technology for autonomous ships is now commercially available, and crucial collision-avoidance tools have been around in various forms since the early 1990s.

The Yara Birkeland is a modest but important step forward. Although it can be operated remotely by a pilot, it will also be able to cruise on its own, using an array of sensors, cameras and navigation tools, all guided by sophisticated algorithms. Back on shore, an operations centre will monitor its progress.

When it launches next year, with a fully electric power plant, the ship will transport fertiliser from Yara’s factory to ports about 26km away. This will replace 40,000 shipments a year that had once been carried by polluting diesel trucks. The route will give the ship’s owners — along with regulators and other autonomous shipping aspirants — a first chance to see such a vessel in operation.

And it will do so in Norwegian territorial waters not subject to IMO regulations. Such trips may soon become routine. Norway has designated the waters off Trondheim as a test site for autonomous ships of all kinds, from container vessels to tugs.

Earlier this year, Rolls-Royce announced that it expects autonomous container ships in international waters within 10 to 15 years.

Other groups are working to do it sooner: One United Kingdom organisation plans to have a solar-powered autonomous research vessel cross the Atlantic in 2019. Lloyd’s Register, the 250-year-old ship-classification group, has already issued guidance for crewless operations.

All this could potentially have enormous benefits for the shipping industry — and the world. Vast amounts of real-time data from the ships will allow fleet owners to optimise their routes (and profits) based on factors such as maintenance schedules, weather patterns, fuel prices and cargoes. Eventually, fleet owners might find themselves competing with the likes of Amazon.com and Alibaba Group — major shippers with the big data operations and deep pockets necessary to integrate autonomous ships into their logistics operations.

For those companies, “all hands on deck” already means fingers on a keyboard or a joystick. Within a decade or two, the maritime shipping industry may well be thinking the same way. BLOOMBERG

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Adam Minter is an American writer based in Asia, where he covers politics, culture and business. He is the author of Junkyard Planet: Travels in the Billion-Dollar Trash Trade.

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