Posted on Feb 5th, 2013 - World maritime News
As fuel costs and emissions’ levels come under more scrutiny,
paper logbooks and noon reports are no longer the most effective means
of monitoring and communicating fuel consumption and emissions data,
according to NAPA, the leading software house for ship design and
operations.
Currently bunker fuel readings for most international vessels are
taken as daily ‘noon reports’ – collected onboard and send to the
shipowner on a daily basis during a vessel’s voyage. However, with
bunker fuel costs at sustained record levels and environmental
legislation pertaining to emissions of Greenhouse Gases (GHGs), Sulphur
Oxide (SOx), Nitrogen Oxide (NOx) now in force, many ship owners and
management companies have come under more scrutiny from charterers,
authorities and other stakeholders, such as investors, to provide more
accurate measurement of daily bunker fuel consumption and emissions
levels.
Esa Henttinen,Vice President at NAPA for Operations commented:
“Although they have long been the industry standard, 24-hour
reports taken at noon from vessels and relayed onshore are starting to
have limited use for the owners and operators. As ship owners and
managers come under more scrutiny over their fuel costs, environmental
and safety credentials, more accuracy and ‘real time’ data is being
requested from multiple stakeholders, including charterers, insurers,
regulators and financiers. The good news is that the ability to collect
more accurate data in real time and send it onshore is available.
“Moreover, from a safety perspective, ‘noon reports’ represent an
increasingly significant vulnerability as they cannot provide ship
owners and managers with real time information, on safety or performance
for example, that can be acted upon immediately.”
According to NAPA research, owners, managers and operators with large
numbers of vessels under their control, are increasingly turning to
electronic operational solutions that automatically communicate with
shore-based offices as frequently as every ten minutes. This gives those
with the ultimate responsibility ‘real time’ awareness of a vessel’s
fuel consumption, location, the weather conditions it is facing, the
speed it is travelling at and further data that can help to ensure that
these vessels are operating to the safety and efficiency standards
owners, operators, charterers and other stakeholders expect of them.
While there are commercial and safety benefits having more accurate
and ‘real time’ data, the latest condition monitoring software has the
potential to enable greater effectiveness in the legislative drive to
reduce GHG emissions from shipping. Papers were presented at both IMO
MEPC meetings in 2012 on the subject of monitoring while the European
Commission have declared their intention to pursue mandatory monitoring,
reporting and verification of vessel fuel consumption. Industrial
installations and the aviation industry already face requirements for
measurement and reporting and the technology is there for this to be
accomplished by the shipping industry.
These systems also have significant benefits in measuring the
effectiveness of any new technologies that have been fitted to the
vessel. When the Finnish shipping company Bore wanted to verify
efficiency savings from NAPA for Operations SEEMP software and WE Tech
Solutions’ Variable Frequency Drive Shaft Generator (VFD SG) application
on their Ro-Ro vessel M/V Bore Sea, ‘NAPA Office’ – with real-time
reporting and logbooks – was used to record improvements in fuel
consumption. ‘NAPA Office’ enabled the continuous monitoring of
efficiency, speed, location and other contributing factors before and
after the installation of the efficiency solutions allowing Bore to
measure the saving they achieved and how they were achieved. This
resulted in their awareness that the Speed Optimisation portion of the
NAPA suite had saved them 6% in fuel while the VFD SG had provided 10%
savings, an important decision-making tool should they look to increase
efficiency on other vessels.
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