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CLdN Announce Installation of 'Rotor-Sails' On World's Largest Short-Sea Ro-Ro Freight Vessel

2nd March 2023
This CGI image of MV Delphine which occasionally operates ro-ro freight vehicle services between Dublin, Zeebrugge and Rotterdam, has since been fitted with a ‘rotor’ sail wind propulsion system. The 235m vessel which is among the largest ro-ro short-sea vessels of its type in the world, along sister MV Celine, was constructed in South Korea’s Hyundai Mipo Shipyard.
This CGI image of MV Delphine which occasionally operates ro-ro freight vehicle services between Dublin, Zeebrugge and Rotterdam, has since been fitted with a ‘rotor’ sail wind propulsion system. The 235m vessel which is among the largest ro-ro short-sea vessels of its type in the world, along sister MV Celine, was constructed in South Korea’s Hyundai Mipo Shipyard. Credit: Norsepower-facebook

CLdN Ro-Ro, the Luxembourg based logistics specialist for sea, rail, and road, announced that the MV Delphine as Afloat reported a year ago has since been successfully fitted with a rotor-sail wind propulsion system.

Delphine (along with Celine), is one of the world's largest short-sea RoRo vessels, and now is the first vessel in CLdN fleet to be fitted with the system. Last month the vessel returned to service from Zeebrugge, Belgium and from where Afloat adds they operate to Dublin Port and the Port of Cork.

The MV Delphine is a vessel with a cargo capacity of over 8,000 lane meters and transits between the UK, Ireland and mainland Europe.

The vessel is the largest and one of the most fuel-efficient short sea roll-on / roll-off (ro-ro) vessel operating in the world today with 28 grammes of CO2 emitted per tonne of cargo shipped per km travelled. With two 35mx5m rotor sails deployed, the ship will emit even less greenhouse gas going forward thanks to an emission reduction saving of up to 10%.

The rotor sails, which can be installed on new vessels or retrofitted on existing ships, incorporate a modernised version of the Flettner rotor, a spinning cylinder that uses the Magnus effect to harness wind power to add forward thrust to a ship.

The solution is fully automated and detects whenever the wind is strong enough to deliver fuel and emission savings, at which point the sails start automatically. The sails are also tiltable, allowing the vessel to pass under bridges and maintaining operational flexibility.

CLdN will work with the Maritime Technology Division at Ghent University to study the performance of the sails on the MV Delphine in the coming months.

Gary Walker, Chief Operating Officer, CLdN RoRo, commented: “CLdN is the top performer amongst its ro-ro shipping peers in Northwest Europe, producing the lowest CO2 emissions per tonne of freight carried with its fleet of modern ships. By investing in technologically advanced ships and terminals, CLdN enables its customers to improve their carbon footprint and support them in making their supply chains more efficient and robust.2

He added “the rotor sails will maximise our fuel and emissions savings on the MV Delphine and we will use this project to help determine how the technology could be deployed on the current CLdN fleet and our new-build vessels. Delphine’s redeployment to the fleet will help meet the current high levels of customer demand.”

Published in Ports & Shipping
Jehan Ashmore

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Jehan Ashmore

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Jehan Ashmore is a marine correspondent, researcher and photographer, specialising in Irish ports, shipping and the ferry sector serving the UK and directly to mainland Europe. Jehan also occasionally writes a column, 'Maritime' Dalkey for the (Dalkey Community Council Newsletter) in addition to contributing to UK marine periodicals. 

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