‘There’s no congestion on the water’: This high-tech electric ferry could cut journey times in half

A new P-12 electric hydrofoil passenger vessel slices through the water in Stockholm’s archipelago, Sweden.
A new P-12 electric hydrofoil passenger vessel slices through the water in Stockholm’s archipelago, Sweden. Copyright AP Photo/David Keyton
Copyright AP Photo/David Keyton
By Euronews Green with AP
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Energy savings from going airborne give the hydrofoil electric ferry the speed and range needed to make it work on batteries.

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Many cities around the world see clean and efficient public transport as a crucial way to lower their carbon emissions. For cities with waterways, Sweden's high-tech ferry could soon set a new standard.

Speeding through Stockholm's archipelago, electric boat maker Candela's new P-12 vessel barely makes a sound as it glides over a metre above the water. 

Its developers hope the ferry, which was unveiled this week, will yield a new era of waterborne public transport.

"This is a real leap forward," said Erik Eklund, who is in charge of the commercial vessel division at Candela. "The energy savings we get by going airborne on the foils give us the speed and range we need to make this work on batteries."

Faster and more energy-efficient

The vessel is designed to carry 30 passengers at a maximum speed of 30 knots (56 kph) - considerably faster than other electric passenger ferries. It achieves this with carbon fibre hydrofoil wings that lift the boat out of the water, reducing drag.

Candela says its technology reduces the energy per passenger kilometre by 95 per cent compared with the diesel ships that are currently transporting passengers across the picturesque Stockholm archipelago, which is made up of tens of thousands of islands and skerries stretching out into the Baltic Sea.

An added benefit is that the vessel is exempt from the 12-knot speed limit in Stockholm because it leaves no wake - waves made by a boat's displacement through water that increase with speed and could swamp other vessels or erode the shoreline.

For cities with waterways, a high-tech boat in Sweden could soon set a new standard.
For cities with waterways, a high-tech boat in Sweden could soon set a new standard.AP Photo/David Keyton

The P-12 is still in testing but is set to enter service in July next year between the Stockholm suburb of Ekero and the city centre as part of a nine-month pilot project.

The ferry will cut the travel time from Ekero by conventional public transport from 55 minutes to 25 minutes.

The company wants to build on lessons learned from the launch of its smaller electric hydrofoil leisure boat. Onboard, engineers are fine-tuning the hydrofoils, which are regulated by a computer 100 times per second to compensate for the state of the sea and negate the effects of any waves. The vessel can operate in waves of up to two metres.

Where else could electric ferries be useful?

Candela hopes that as well as Stockholm, cities like San Francisco, New York and Venice will lead the electrification of waterborne public transport.

Gustav Hemming, Vice President of the Regional Executive Board in Stockholm, said the Swedish capital is on board.

"The ambition is, for the Stockholm region, to expand public transport on water because we think that is one of the keys to make public transport more attractive," he said.

There were around 6.2 million public transport boat journeys in the Stockholm region in 2022. While boat traffic remains a small part of the entire public transit system, it is the fastest-growing mode of public transport after the COVID-19 pandemic.

A ferry in Stockholm, Sweden.
A ferry in Stockholm, Sweden.JONATHAN NACKSTRAND/AFP

"Our roads are congested and building new ones is very expensive and not very environmentally friendly," Hemming said, looking out onto the open waters of Stockholm on a cold autumnal day. 

"But here we have our traditional infrastructure. There is no congestion on the water."

The use of hydrofoils to raise a vessel out of the water to reduce drag is not new. Ship designers have experimented with the technology for more than a century, but costs and maintenance issues have prevented its widespread adoption. 

However, new lightweight carbon fibre material saw the technology make a comeback in elite sailing. With efficient electric motors and high costs for traditional fuels, it's getting a second birth in the public transport sector, too.

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"We know that marine vessels are often energy-hungry, and the limited energy density of today's batteries will be a barrier for electrification of a marine fleet," said Arash Eslamdoost, associate professor of applied hydrodynamics at the Chalmers University of Technology in Gothenburg. 

"Here is where foiling steps in as a radical solution for taking the most out of the limited onboard electric power."

The maritime industry is ripe for change

Globally, several hydrofoil electric passenger ferries are under design or actively being developed. In the UK, Artemis Technologies has announced plans for a fully electric hydrofoil ferry to operate in Northern Ireland between Belfast and nearby Bangor, possibly as early as next year.

Robin Cook from the Swedish Transport Agency says the maritime industry is ripe for change, especially for short-distance connections. But he stressed that public infrastructure must keep up with the latest developments and even encourage this through incentives.

"One important part of the electrification is when the ships connect to the ports through the onshore power supply," he said. 

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"And here the harbours play a very important role to make sure that the infrastructure is in place for these connections."

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