Speed limits for ships
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Discussion

Etretat

Original Poster:

1,848 posts

246 months

Monday 11th November 2019
quotequote all
Just read this

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-503...

Obviously a good thing to reduce the emissions from ships but not sure how it could be enforced.
Surely reducing the speed means the journeys take longer. Because the demand for the cargo carried will remain constant surely this would result in an increase in ships?
Have I got this wrong?

SamR380

737 posts

144 months

Monday 11th November 2019
quotequote all
Depends if the ships are always full I suppose.

vaud

58,210 posts

179 months

Monday 11th November 2019
quotequote all
Etretat said:
Obviously a good thing to reduce the emissions from ships but not sure how it could be enforced.
Ships are all satellite tracked. Easy to track current and average speed on any given leg.

e.g. https://www.myshiptracking.com/

Earthdweller

18,199 posts

150 months

Monday 11th November 2019
quotequote all
I’d have thought that they already travel at the most economical speed

Going faster or slower doesn’t automatically mean less fuel/emissions


vaud

58,210 posts

179 months

Monday 11th November 2019
quotequote all
Earthdweller said:
I’d have thought that they already travel at the most economical speed

Going faster or slower doesn’t automatically mean less fuel/emissions
Quite a detailed paper here:

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/...

CambsBill

2,412 posts

202 months

Monday 11th November 2019
quotequote all
This already started to a limited extent a few years ago, as the shipping companies tried to cut their fuel costs.

In theory it's a no-brainer, given that bunker fuel is one of the dirtiest around. However, it would require more ships to move the same tonnage of freight and there would have to be some complicated load planning done to allow for the fact that a significant number of containers carry perishable goods. for example.