Back

Worlds largest electric ship launched by Tasmanian boatbuilder

168 points1 monththeguardian.com
jillesvangurp1 month ago

The Guardian article glosses over a few things that are actually interesting about this ship:

- It's made out of aluminum instead of steel. The resulting weight savings make it a bit more efficient. That's something this shipping yard specializes in.

- Because it is going to run in shallow water on the river Plate, it doesn't actually have propellers but a water jet propulsion system.

Fully charged did a video on the construction of this ship early last year: https://fullycharged.show/episodes/electric-ferry-the-larges...

The project of getting this ship from Tasmania to South America is also going to be interesting as well. It can't do it under its own power; it's designed for a ~50km crossing, not a trans Pacific/Atlantic journey. At the time, they were thinking tug boats.

mk_stjames1 month ago

I'd wager they will use what is known as a 'Float-on/float-off' ship for transport... it's rather common actually-

It's a ship with a very low deck line that partially submerges itself, with the center of the deck underwater deep enough so the other vessel can 'float on' over the deck. They they pump the water back out, raising the deck above water and the boat on top it just rests flat.

They do this for some oil rigs as well.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heavy-lift_ship#Semi-submersib...

3eb7988a16631 month ago

That first image on the page is incredible.

KellyCriterion1 month ago

yeah, I can spot Elisons new Yacht to be delivered thered :-D

SideburnsOfDoom1 month ago

> The project of getting this ship from Tasmania to South America is also going to be interesting as well.

Indeed. As I remarked last time (1) "it's long distance and can be rough seas" They get to pick a good time of year, but either route goes past places known for storms and shipwrecks in the winter (June to September). Would you choose to go via Cape Agulhas or around Cape Horn?

It would be annoying to be ready to deliver the ship, but due to schedule over-runs, to have to wait 4 months for the weather to improve.

1) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45844832

wepple1 month ago

The relocation was the big question on my mind.

The other is: when will they charge? Does this ship not run at night?

robin_reala1 month ago

If it’s anything like the electric ferries that cross the Öresund beween Helsingborg and Helsingør, they grab charge while they’re unloading and loading at each terminal:

Each trip consumes approximately 1,175 kWh, which is nearly the same amount a residential home consumes in a month. In each port is a tower with a robot arm that connects the charging cable automatically every time the ship comes to the dock. The system charges 10.5 kV, 600Amp and 10.5MW. The batteries have a total capacity of 4,160 kWh, which means that we always have a surplus of electricity if for some reason we cannot load during a stop or if the transit takes more time than usual.

In Helsingör the ferries charge for approx. 6 minutes and in Helsingborg the ferries charge for approx. 9 minutes. This is enough to suffice for the journey across the strait.[1]

Side note: you can also charge your car on board from the boat’s batteries.

[1] https://www.oresundslinjen.com/about-us/sustainability

leoh1 month ago

10.5MW on demand is wild

+1
jasonwatkinspdx1 month ago
phire1 month ago

It’s not that big when you consider many DC car chargers can deliver 0.25 MW.

So ”only” 42 car sized chargers for a massive boat, there are probably some massive Tesla superchargers sites that approach that.

iancmceachern1 month ago

The Cruise Ship Terminal in San Francisco has 12 mW. Apparently it's uncommon in that it's wired with enough power available so the cruise ships don't have to run their on board generators while docked in port here. It's a major pollution thing.

SideburnsOfDoom1 month ago

Q:

> when will they charge?

A:

> The ship... will travel between the ports of Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Colonia del Sacramento, Uruguay. The two cities are 60 kilometers apart, a distance it is expected to travel in 90 minutes.

> Direct-current charging stations will be installed at each port... A full charge is expected to take just 40 minutes.

https://spectrum.ieee.org/electric-boat-battery-ship-ferry

bryanlarsen1 month ago

Full charge is 40 but the charge for each journey is 6 / 9 minutes.

Big difference, since I imagine the turnaround time on a similar ICE ferry would be less than 40 minutes but more than 10.

+1
SideburnsOfDoom1 month ago
pjc501 month ago

Also: installing the charging infrastructure. Special docking requirements for the non electric Spirit Of Tasmania were a big problem.

seg_lol1 month ago

Throw some big kites on it and sail it, use the jet propulsion just for vector control.

lazylizard1 month ago

but people who take ferry rides want to know roughly when they'll reach the other side?

seg_lol1 month ago

Just to get the ferry from Tasmania to South America.

merek1 month ago

Thanks for the video link, it's way more informative than the original article.

lostlogin1 month ago

I wonder if they could load batteries into it instead of cars and passengers?

I assume it’s too hard to be worthwhile, and probably still wouldn’t get the range.

dzhiurgis1 month ago

I think that makes a ton of sense, esp since you can retrofit diesel-electric ferries.

Skips expensive DC charging infrastructure, but does require to buy two batteries which can get expensive. Over time vpp / market arbitrage can pay for battery itself tho.

Also sacrifices some of the cargo capacity. I.e. for wellington - picton that’s about 4 rail cars or 6 semi trailers.

Edit: also smaller turnaround time.

lostlogin1 month ago

For one long haul trip at the start of its life, a generator might be an option too.

New Zealand should we well suited to electrifying everything, with a lot of good energy sources.

I can’t see the current government supporting anything EV, particularly across the Cook Strait, given the ferry fiasco to date.

lostlogin1 month ago

For one long haul trip at the start of its life, a generator might be an option too.

New Zealand should we well suited to electric ferries, with a lot of good energy sources.

I can’t see the current government supporting anything EV, particularly across the Cook Strait, given the ferry fiasco to date.

lazylizard1 month ago

i realise there are plenty of alu boats on the water. but im still not quite sure how they keep the aluminium away from iron in practice.

tedk-421 month ago

Article quotes `40 megawatt-hours of installed capacity.` - Surely this can get you pretty far from Tasmania to South America.

chii1 month ago

apparently, 40MWh of capacity is enough to travel 40 nautical miles. The distance between Tasmania and South America is around 6,500–7,500 nautical miles.

amelius1 month ago

For comparison, a wide body airliner needs ~0.15MWh to travel 1 nautical mile.

+1
eesmith1 month ago
rcxdude1 month ago

I would be extremely surprised if the ship were designed to use 100% of its capacity in one way of its intended route.

jacquesm1 month ago

The drag on a vessel is orders of magnitude larger than the drag on a car.

TinyBig1 month ago

I've taken one of the electric roll-on/roll-off ferries that cross from Denmark to Sweden over the Øresund strait. Zero fumes, zero vibration, incredibly quiet. Awesome to see this tech being used for longer crossings.

t0lo1 month ago

Spent a few months down in Hobart sussing out an antarctic science degree- really cool marine industry nexus down there with world leading research, all of the antarctic operations, and this stuff. Definitely the most nautical feeling city in Australia

cfn1 month ago

I would like to know its price. Here in the Azores Islands there was a project to replace an ICE ferry with an electric one but they couldn't agree on the price with the boat builders. It went up to as much as 35 million Euros but it ended up being cancelled as that, apparently, wasn't enough for a ferry that can do 1-1.5 hour crossings with a dozen cars or so.

toast01 month ago

Size of the ferry will make a big difference. A small ferry is going to cost a lot less than this 225 car ferry. My quick reading is the Azore ferries hold about 8 cars; that's a totally different class of vehicle.

My local ferry system has an electrification project[1]; the current active project is three 160-car hybrid-electric ferries for a total cost of $714.5 million. A NZ shipbuilder is probably more competitive than a US shipbuilder, and details matter....

This article says $200M [2] which is a lot lower than I expected, given it's a one-off and larger (I think) than the WSDOT 160-car ferries.

[1] https://wsdot.wa.gov/construction-planning/major-projects/fe...

[2] https://www.ro.com.uy/2025/10/16/nuevo-barco-china-zorrilla-...

cfn1 month ago

Two hundred million would be really good compared with 35 for a 10-12 car ferry. We have had larger ferries in the past which would do the whole archipelago and would take over 100 cars.

robocat1 month ago

> NZ shipbuilder

Note that the shipbuilder from there article is based in Tasmania which is part of Australia. NZ isn't yet part of Australia.

kitd1 month ago
robocat1 month ago

Classic! I hope she told the officials that Kazakhstan is part of Russia.

senko1 month ago

As a comparison, in my banana country they spent €7.7m on a beat up old Greek ICE ferry that isn't even up to local safety standards[0].

Compared to that, €35m or so for a new modern vessel doesn't sound outrageous.

[0] https://www.morski.hr/jadrolinija-za-7-7-milijuna-eura-kupuj...

cfn1 month ago

I had no idea that would be the cost of a ferry albeit old. We have a massive problem with transportation between islands due to lack of ships/investment. For example, out of the 9 islands only three have daily voyages and right now even that isn't happening as one boat broke down and another is away on maintenance. We could do we a couple even old ones.

The main issue I saw here with the electric ferry was that 90% of the installed generation in the islands uses HFO so we would be charging the ferry with a fuel that pollutes more than the diesel used to run it.

araes1 month ago

General survey of ferry prices in the 25+ meter range to give you an idea. Length number can be changed to filter for longer / shorter. There's 37 in the 25+ range, 19 in the 50+ range, and 11 in the 100+ range currently, although a few false positives on the keyword matches.

https://www.yachtworld.com/boats-for-sale/length-25/keyword-...

djoldman1 month ago

It took a bit of digging but it looks like the ship can operate for 90 minutes without recharging:

> ... the batteries will power eight axial-flow water jets driven by permanent magnet electric motors. These will be able to keep the ship going for 90 minutes before needing to be recharged.

> The ship’s permanent home will be the Rio de la Plata estuary, where it will travel between the ports of Buenos Aires, Argentina, and Colonia del Sacramento, Uruguay. The two cities are 60 kilometers apart, a distance Hull 096 is expected to travel in 90 minutes. Direct-current charging stations will be installed at each port and will draw energy from the two countries’ grids. A full charge is expected to take just 40 minutes.

https://spectrum.ieee.org/electric-boat-battery-ship-ferry

djoldman1 month ago

Some cool pics of construction components:

https://www.abc.net.au/news/2025-05-02/incat-launches-worlds...

phibz1 month ago

Calling it the largest electric ship seems wrong or at least requires extra specificity compared to nuclear aircraft carriers.

jbotz1 month ago

The propulsion of nuclear-powered aircraft carriers isn't electric... it's driven directly from the steam produced by the reactors.

Edit: At least that's the case for US Nimitz-class aircraft carriers. Nuclear submarines apparently come in both types, with electric motors or direct drive steam-turbines, but I guess this ferry is bigger than any of those.

jcrawfordor1 month ago

There have been diesel electric surface ships as well going back to WWII, although it hasn't proven a very popular design and they remain an oddity.

bertil1 month ago

I’m curious if it would have made sense to build it as a hydrofoil. There are a couple of electric boat companies that use that to reduce drag, wake and improve comfort on-board. The software to keep things level is non-trivial, but I don’t know if it adds a lot of complexity to the build.

SideburnsOfDoom1 month ago

Previously, 55 days ago: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45844832

Discussion on a different article, about the same boat.

trebligdivad1 month ago

Does anyone have a feel for how heavy the weight of an equivalent oil(?) driven ship would be? It has the big number for the weight of batteries, but I've got nothing to compare against.

sparklysoup1 month ago

700-ish tonnes - it's in the wikipedia article:

"In 2020, Buquebus originally commissioned Incat to deliver a new ship to use dual-fuel propulsion, capable of operating on liquefied natural gas and diesel, with around 400 tonne of main engines, 100 tonne gearboxes, 100 tonne cryogenic fuel tanks and 100 tonne fuel."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/China_Zorrilla_(ship)

pjc501 month ago

Google supplied me with this original spec: https://incat.com.au/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Mini-Spec-13...

Same ship, originally specced to carry tens of thousands of liters of oil. No overall displacement number, oddly.

ihaveone1 month ago

It looks like they could have mounted at least 100 solar modules on top, if not 200. That's 600-1200kwDC, given its flat, at 800kwp/kWh, that means for an hour of peak production, after losses, would do at least 300kwh for the smaller size and 600kwh for the larger size. If each trip is around 1150kwh and takes longer than an hour, more than half of the power required could be generated. As solar modules are solid-state devices, seems short sighted to not slam a system on the roof. PV modules are literally just glass sandwiches with wires and DC to DC battery chargers are very efficient. The weight would also be partly counter-acted by using the modules as the skin for the roof.

walrus011 month ago

Your math is far off. If you put 60kW (STC rating) of PV panels as quantity 100 of 600W premium panels on top, in Uruguay, it'll produce somewhere between 6800 to 8100 kWh per month if the panels are perfectly exposed to sun from sunrise to sunset.

If we say it's 7500kWh a month that's something like 250 kWh of production per day, which is a tiny drop in the bucket compared to the amount of energy needed to charge the ferry.

master_crab1 month ago

Can anyone elif why it makes sense to build a boat with 250 tones of batteries as opposed to building a generator/motor combo that many ships and trains use now?

NooneAtAll31 month ago

I hope that such a flat roof will be covered in solar

red75prime1 month ago

It should take around 50 hours to fully charge its batteries under ideal conditions. That is 5 - 10 days realistically. I guess it's impractical considering that it will ferry across the River Plate.

teiferer1 month ago

If it can charge while sailing there is no downside. At least as long as a substantial percentage of total charge can come from the integrated solar.

SideburnsOfDoom1 month ago

> At least as long as a substantial percentage of total charge can come from the integrated solar

Yes, but that's highly doubtful. It doesn't work for EVs with panels on the car's roof - you don't get significant charge from it. It's far more practical to put the panels on a larger, fixed structure where the vehicles charges daily.

Sources e.g.

https://octopusev.com/ev-hub/why-dont-electric-cars-have-sol...

https://www.forbes.com/sites/billroberson/2022/11/30/why-doe...

https://www.reddit.com/r/NoStupidQuestions/comments/ykwd89/w...

red75prime1 month ago

When Argentine gets enough solar over-provision, ship owners might make money by charging during negative solar prices.

reactordev1 month ago

Any flat surface on a ship that is designed for electric should be covered in flexible solar panels.

Why do this if it can’t fully charge the ship? To offset the costs of charging the ship at port, to provide longer range by providing a lower voltage power source for 12V DC charging (cell phones, iPads, 5w LED lights).

So the commenter is correct, she needs panels and the fact that this isn’t part of the launch shows that they were more interested in being first than practical.

cush1 month ago

It’s possible adding panels could reduce the range because they’re heavy and so high up on the ship.

+3
jacquesm1 month ago
servo_sausage1 month ago

It's not a long range vessel, but it should have a fairly long service life.

Additional weight and complexity on a one off boat would be more expensive than a seperate much more standard solar and battery system on land. And you might be able to get additional value out of selling electricity from an oversized storage.

It's not sensible to draw your system boundaries around the boat by itself; there is significant terminal infrastructure; and even grid electrical infrastructure to consider.

+1
reactordev1 month ago
s1artibartfast1 month ago

Pintegrated panel design,cost, and maintenance can be more expensive than the puchace price of electricity. Putting pannels on regular ground is vastly more efficient.

This is kinda like saying everyone should wear solar hats to offset their home electric bill.

rasz1 month ago

Solar roof is a bunk idea. In case of cars, trucks and this ferry you can gain whole 1-3 additional minutes of operation per whole day of perfect solar radiation.

victorbjorklund1 month ago

Probably more efficient to keep inverters, panels etc on land.

phinnaeus1 month ago

I’m not a sparky but would you need inverters if the panels are just for charging batteries? On the other hand, there is probably already inverters onboard to provide AC power to passenger power points.

servo_sausage1 month ago

No, you need some kind of DC converter to regulate voltage, but no inherent requirement to go to AC. Lots of small camping and off grid systems do that.

Although at the scale of a one off boat i would think it's cheaper to use the more widespread systems for bigger grid connected panel installations; so you are back to inverters.

reactordev1 month ago

You would be consuming fossil fuels to charge a ship when the sun is giving you energy for free.

At least capture some of that to charge some batteries or extend the length of your voyage.

WJW1 month ago

The energy is not free, since the solar panels cost money and don't last forever. Even at optimistic prices, it's still something like 0.03 USD/kWh. Install them on a boat and they have to deal with constant vibrations, humid conditions, seagulls shitting all over them, etc etc etc.

I used to work on ships and almost everything constantly breaks down without constant maintenance. I bet it would be much cheaper to put the solar panels on land and charge the ship when it's in port.

+1
teiferer1 month ago
+2
reactordev1 month ago
victorbjorklund1 month ago

Read again. I said you can put the panels on land where it is 100x easier and cheaper to install them vs on a ship. Solar panels are not fossil fuel.

cush1 month ago

Why don’t electric cars and trucks have solar panels then?

+3
reactordev1 month ago
OfficeChad1 month ago

[dead]

dzhiurgis1 month ago

I doubt it but it deff goes well with roro batteries too.

NooneAtAll31 month ago

more efficient to leave surface unused?

victorbjorklund1 month ago

Yes, it is more efficient to install it on land. The installation will be cheaper, maintainance will be cheaper and the panels will last longer.

bell-cot1 month ago

Talk to a marine engineer about the overhead (equipment, training, emergency procedures, etc.) of adding a small-scale solar plant to all the things that they've already got to deal with on a ship.

And recall that this bridge - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Scott_Key_Bridge_(Balt... - will need a multi-billion dollar replacement, because the tiny engineering staff of a huge freighter could not diagnose and correct a surprise electrical failure. Within the maybe 3 1/2 minutes between the initial fault, and when the collision became physically inevitable.

scraptor1 month ago

More efficient to spend the same amount of money on shoreside panels with lower installation costs.

servo_sausage1 month ago

Same reason EVs rarely have solar panels; adds weight and complexity, making it more expensive than putting the panels somewhere less wet and salty.

SideburnsOfDoom1 month ago

... and doesn't add significant charge.

> The surface area of a standard car simply isn’t big enough to hold the sheer volume of solar panels that would be needed to capture a meaningful amount of energy from the sun.

https://octopusev.com/ev-hub/why-dont-electric-cars-have-sol...

> there just isn’t enough space on top of cars to make a meaningful contribution to the charging needs of the battery

https://www.forbes.com/sites/billroberson/2022/11/30/why-doe...

The same must be true of a ship.

Put the larger solar panel installations at the places where the vehicles charge.

jeltz1 month ago

Do you have solar panels on top of your head? If not why do you leave that space unused? Space being there is one of the worst possible reasons. That bloats designs and makes them expensive to build and maintain.

Frenchgeek1 month ago

And they could have called it "Androids dream" but didn't....

cush1 month ago

250 tonnes of batteries…

maelito1 month ago

How many km does it operate ?

Edit : 50 km according to another comment

EB-Barrington1 month ago

[dead]

DemocracyFTW21 month ago

Ugly as hell as far as ships go. Ugly as hell like almost all new cars, trains and buildings.