Biofouling increases the drag of ships, so more energy is needed to power them, increasing fuel costs and multiplying their carbon emissions.
To combat biofouling, technologies such as special coatings on ships and cleaning led by teams of divers are commonplace. But Norwegian company Jotun has a different approach.
The HullSkater, pictured here, is a robot that removes biofouling.
Jotun
Jotun has developed the HullSkater, a 200-kilogram (440-pound) magnetic crawling robot that removes the early stages of fouling. It's remotely controlled by operators in Norway, who use a 4G connection and the robot's four high-definition cameras to inspect the surface, before using its brush to remove initial signs of build-up.
Getting ahead of biofouling
By cleaning biofouling at an early stage, "we remove it before it becomes a problem," explains Geir Axel Oftedahl, Jotun's business development director.
Depending on the size of the ship, Oftedahl says inspecting and cleaning with the HullSkater takes around four hours and happens between eight and 16 times a year. The robot is kept onboard the ship and can be deployed whenever the vessel is stationary and has a data connection, he adds.
Biofouling is the buildup of marine life, such as barnacles, mussels, algae, and other organisms. Here a "slime" is shown on the hull of this ship.
GloFouling/IMO
Jotun has also developed a special coating that is painted onto the ship to work with the HullSkater's brush, says Oftedahl. This increases the effectiveness of the technology and reduces the risk of eroding too much of the ship's surface during cleaning, which could leak chemicals into the sea, he says.
Jotun says it is the first company to combine a robot, management, and a coating -- to ensure the hull is always clean.
According to Geoffrey Swain, director of the Center for Corrosion and Biofouling Control at the Florida Institute of Technology, there are challenges to managing anti-fouling technologies, as different movements and locations activate coatings in different ways. But he says robotics are the "best technology we have so far."
Reduced costs and emissions
"If you take a ship to Australia or New Zealand, you're inspected, so it's better to be proactive," Swain says. "It's making ship owners, or even ship charterers now come in and start to really have to focus on how they manage the ship's hull coating."
The HullSkater uses four high-definition cameras to inspect the surface, and its brush to remove initial signs of build-up.
Jotun
The HullSkater, which took over four years to develop, was designed to help decarbonize the shipping industry. Jotun claims that every $1 invested in its technology -- including the coating, robot and offshore monitoring -- will save more than $3 in fuel costs.
So far, the company is on its way to commercializing its invention -- manufacturing and supplying to 50 ships, says Oftedahl.
After unveiling the HullSkater at a virtual event in March, it signed its first commercial contract with Swiss-Italian container shipping line Mediterranean Shipping Company (MSC); later this year, the robot will be installed on one of MSC's larger ships in China's Guangzhou Shipyard.
"Clean hulls are only one piece of the jigsaw when it comes to delivering a more sustainable shipping industry," says Giuseppe Gargiulo, assistant manager at MSC. "But a central piece nonetheless."
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The robot that could help make the shipping industry greener - CNN
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