How to make ships more efficient?

Canadian Maritime Community Meets for GL's Annual Committee Meeting

Montreal, Canada, 23 September 2009 - "How to make ships more efficient?" This was the key question posed at the 15th Canadian Committee meeting of Germanischer Lloyd (GL). More than 20 representatives of the Canada and U.S. Flags, ship owners and operators, yards, consultants, and port authorities attended the event hosted by Executive Vice President Americas Capt. Kevin Coyne and Committee Chairman Peter Cairns from the Shipbuilding Association of Canada.

"Reducing the environmental impact of shipping in order to upgrade its image as an environmentally friendly mode of transportation, is one of the most important topics for the maritime industry," he said in his introduction. Apart from fuel efficiency and emissions also statutory delegation and ship recycling was on the agenda. Canada is currently implementing a National Shipbuilding Procurement Strategy aimed at renewing the federal fleet and building world-class shipbuilding capability in Canada, while providing more predictable work for the maritime industry. The overall goal is to strengthen the competitiveness of Canadian shipbuilding yards vis-ā-vis European yards in building complex ships.

Greatest savings during design phase
While there are significant savings from operational and low-level technical changes, the greatest savings generally can be achieved when engineering optimisations are taken into account. Most ships were designed for operating conditions that are no longer valid. For example, a ship with a design speed of 25 knots might be operated at 18 knots in today's environment. "Since its bulbous bow is not optimised for this speed, the generated wave patterns cause the water resistance to increase", explained Volker Höppner from GL subsidiary Future Ship. As a result, fuel costs rise.

But hull lines and bulbous bows alone are not the only determinants of resistance. Höppner said: "That is why FutureShip's ECO-Chances is designed to provide a holistic evaluation of a ship. Utilising advanced software tools, such as FutureShip's dedicated flow simulation/optimisation tools and powerful parametric modelling software, experts assess the ship from top to bottom to identify the most promising focus areas for optimisation." A typical evaluation might result in a series of five to six engineering options that offer significant fuel savings. These are presented with estimates of expected savings as well as estimated return on investment.

Some of the suggested options may require additional engineering before implementation. However, hydrodynamic optimisations, for example, often require detailed studies by experienced engineers with advanced software tools in order to optimise results. For these situations, FutureShip offers the services of their engineering experts and partners in the form of its ECO-Solutions service.

FutureShip offers a catalogue of services with a common objective: optimizing ships, both those in operation and those yet to be built. Services also comprise the FuelSaver programme, including CO2-analysis (ECO-Patterns) and operational fuel consumption analysis (ECO-Practices) services.

GL in North America
GL's Maritime Services are represented in North America with three offices in Montreal, Halifax and Vancouver in Canada and six offices in New York, Jacksonville, Miami, New Orleans, Houston and Los Angeles in the U.S. In addition, Houston is the headquarter for the entire Americas business operation.

GL's maritime spectrum of services includes newbuilding supervision, ship in service inspections, ISM, ISO and ISPS certification, quality management certification and approval of workshops / shipyards as well as training activities. Since September 2007, GL is authorized to participate in the U.S. Coast Guard's (USCG) Alternate Compliance Program (ACP). GL is one of only three non-American classification societies to have ACP authorization from USCG.

Germanischer Lloyd press release