Rolls Royce Designs Drone Crew Less Cargo Ships
In an age of aerial drones and
driver-less cars, Rolls-Royce (RR/) Holdings Plc is
designing unmanned cargo ships.
Rolls-Royce’s Blue Ocean
development team has set up a virtual-reality prototype at its office in Alesund, Norway, that simulates 360-degree views from a
vessel’s bridge. Eventually, the London-based manufacturer of engines and
turbines says, captains on dry land will use similar control centers to command hundreds of crewless ships.
Drone ships would be safer,
cheaper and less polluting for the $375 billion shipping industry that carries
90 percent of world trade, Rolls-Royce says. They
might be deployed in regions such as the Baltic Sea within a decade, while
regulatory hurdles and industry and union skepticism
about cost and safety will slow global adoption, said Oskar Levander,
the company’s vice president of innovation in marine engineering and technology.
The European Union is funding
a 3.5 million-euro ($4.8 million) study called the Maritime Unmanned Navigation
through Intelligence in Networks project. The researchers are preparing the
prototype for simulated sea trials to assess the costs and benefits, which will
finish next year, said Hans-Christoph Burmeister at the Fraunhofer Center for Maritime Logistics and Services CML in Hamburg.
Even so, maritime companies,
insurers, engineers, labor unions and regulators
doubt unmanned ships could be safe and cost-effective any time soon.
While the idea of automated
ships was first considered decades ago, Rolls-Royce started developing designs
last year. Marine accounts for 16 percent
of the company’s revenue, data compiled by Bloomberg show. Descended
from the luxury car brand now operated by Bayerische Motoren Werke AG, Rolls-Royce
also makes plane engines and turbines.
The company’s schematics show
vessels loaded with containers from front to back, without the bridge structure
where the crew lives. By replacing the bridge — along with the other systems
that support the crew, such as electricity, air conditioning, water and sewage
— with more cargo, ships can cut costs and boost revenue, Levander
said. The ships would be 5 percent lighter before
loading cargo and would burn 12 percent to 15 percent less fuel, he said.
Safety Standards
Crew costs of $3,299 a day
account for about 44 percent of total operating
expenses for a large container ship, according to Moore Stephens LLP, an
industry accountant and consultant.
The potential savings don’t
justify the investments that would be needed to make unmanned ships safe, said
Tor Svensen, chief executive officer of maritime for
DNV GL, the largest company certifying vessels for safety standards.
While each company can develop
its own standards, the International Association of Classification Societies in
London hasn’t developed unified guidelines for unmanned ships, Secretary Derek
Hodgson said.
“Can you imagine what it would
be like with an unmanned vessel with cargo on board trading on the open seas?
You get in enough trouble with crew on board,” Hodgson said by phone Jan. 7.
“There are an enormous number of hoops for it to go through before it even got
onto the drawing board.”
Regulating Ships
Unmanned ships are currently
illegal under international conventions that set minimum crew requirements,
said Simon Bennett, a spokesman for the London-based International Chamber of
Shipping, an industry association representing more than 80 percent
of the global fleet. The organization isn’t seriously considering the issue, he
said by phone Feb. 6.
The country where a ship is
registered is responsible for regulating vessels within its own waters and for
enforcing international rules, said Natasha Brown, a spokeswoman for the
International Maritime Organization, the United Nations agency in London that
oversees global shipping.
The IMO hasn’t received any
proposals on unmanned, remote-controlled ships, she said in a Feb. 6 e-mail.
IMO regulations apply to seagoing vessels trading internationally and exceeding
500 gross tons, except warships and fishing boats.
As long as drone ships don’t
comply with IMO rules, they would be considered unseaworthy and ineligible for
insurance, according to Andrew Bardot, secretary and executive officer of the
London-based International Group of P&I Clubs, whose 13 members cover 90 percent of the global fleet.
Levander of Rolls-Royce said the
transition will happen gradually as computers increase their role in navigation
and operations. Container ships and dry-bulk carriers will probably be the
first to forgo crews, he said. Tankers hauling hazardous materials such as oil
and liquefied natural gas will probably remain manned longer because of the
perception that having people on board is safer, he
said.
Unmanned ships would also
reduce risks such as piracy, since there would be no hostages to capture, Levander said. It would also eliminate liability for
repatriating sailors when owners run out of money or abandon crews, which has
stranded at least 2,379 people in the past decade.
Drone ships would become
vulnerable to a different kind of hijacking: from computer hackers. While the
technology may never be fully secure, it needs to be so difficult to break that
it’s not worth the effort, according to Levander.
Unmanned ships would still
require captains to operate them remotely and people to repair and unload them
in port. These workers would have better quality of life compared with working
at sea, Levander said.