
European Parliament got tough on shipping, methane slipSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/aronnax. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
May 22, 2022
22 min

The purpose and position of the Maersk McKinney Moller Centre for Zero Carbon ShippingSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/aronnax. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
May 5, 2022
20 min

The World Maritime Technology Conference took place in Copenhagen from April 26th to April 28th 2022 (It should have taken place last year but the pandemic put things on hold).During the event five members of WISTA (Women's International Shipping and Trading Association) Technology and Futures Committee were in the audience and taking part in sessions. I cornered them for 20 minutes to talk about where WISTA stands today and the difference it is, and can make.Around the table are:Federica Maiorano (WISTA Monaco) SpotShipSofia Fürstenberg Stott (WISTA Sweden) Fürstenberg Maritime AdvisoryBeverley Mackenzie (WISTA UK) BIMCOJocelyn Hansen (WISTA Denmark) SearoutesKatia Corfini (WISTA Italy) GoversiliaA full transcript of the show can be found onhttps://fathom.world/aronnax-podcast-technology-and-the-future-of-shipping-with-wista/ Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/aronnax. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Apr 29, 2022
15 min

In this episode of the Aronnax Podcast we catch up with Alex Caizergues from Marseille, a kiteboarder who became the fastest man on water powered by the wind, lost his title and now wants to win it back, and in doing so has invented a decision making (digital twin) tool that shipping can use to make itself more efficient.Full transcript on Fathom.WorldSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/aronnax. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Apr 24, 2022
19 min

Lloyd's Register, Heidelberg Cement, Fellekjøpet, Egil Ulvan Rederi and Norwegian Ship Design join Fathom World's Craig Eason to discuss how cargo owners can have a big say in how shipping gets to decarbonise.WITH ORCA is a ship design set to show that while the clean fuels may be expensive, industry can use technology and ingenuity so a ship does not have to be used all the time the ship is at sea.Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/aronnax. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Apr 1, 2022
23 min

Seven teams of maritime and logistics students took part in the latest Intelligence Hunt competition where they were given challenges by companies with real issues they want to have solutions to. The winners of the latest challenge designed a clean fuelled passenger and cargo vessel that could work in the unique waters of Finland. This episode sees Craig Eason talk to the student talent team called Rauma Decarbonisers, along with with the company that set their challenge, Rauma Marine Construction and the team's industry mentor, Poul Woodall, formerly DFDS in Denmark.Guests on the podcast are:MIka Laurilehto, Rauma Marine Construction, FinlandAhmed Hassan, Egypt (studying at Aalto University)Xiaohan Gu, China (studying at Chalmers University of Technology)Ankita Nayak, India (studying at Aalto University)Nsebong Umoh, Nigeria (studying at Chalmers University of Technology)Poul Woodall, Denmark, team mentorSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/aronnax. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Feb 11, 2022
22 min

Rolf Sandvik is ready to sign contracts and build the first of what he hopes wil be a fleet of hydrogen and battery powered luxury cruise ships. He proved his capabilities with Vision of the Fjords but this is going much further in size and ambition. He talks with Craig Eason about the plans and why he thinks it will work.A full transcript can be found on the Aronnax podcast page on the fathom.world websiteSupport this show http://supporter.acast.com/aronnax. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Jan 30, 2022
26 min

Hello again and welcome to another episode of the Aronnax podcast. I am Craig Eason, from Fathom World and podcast host.In this episode we go to Spain, to Barcelona. Because it is here that a relatively young company has begun to make waves having now installed a wind assist technology on a second vessel as it pushes ahead with its plans to join the growing market for fossil fuel free power solutions. The company is called Bound4Blue, founded in 2006 not by nautical engineers, but aeronautical engineers who had an original dream of using wind power in vessels to create electricity that could generate renewable fuels. Over the last fifteen years the company not only adapted its plans, focusing on the energy potential of a rigid wingsail solution, and how it can be a solution into the maritime market, but managaed to go from strength to strength.Entrepreneurs and those with novel ideas will know all to well how hard it is to get traction in a new market. There is the overwhelming and continual need to raise financial support, to be able to focus on a challenge while also looking at winning grants, or investment from angel investors or venture capitalists…or as so many will now, from families friends and fools as many say. But even with initial financial support the challenges never go away, startup financing inevitably is for research and development, for specific projects, not for commercialisation. At some point any company with a product to sell has to take an idea on paper, or a software design programme, and move from scale models to demonstration projects, to then sourcing and contracting materials, suppliers and construction assuming that orders will come. Its called the ”Valley of Death”, and where an entrepreneur start-up with a fantastic product could easily become stuck and fold. The product is tested, the product is ready, and all that is needed is the market to buy it…. And if the product is an extremely visible one, and the market is traditionally very conservative, the challenge is all the greater.This is where Bound4Blue is now, it has a second system installed of one of its two propulsion solutions and is now investing in ramping up. It has been successful in raising money, but knows it needs more.I spoke to two of the co-founders about the journey so far, and how they are ramping up, particularly how they look for suppliers to make the systems, and ensure they have the funding to move forward and expand.Cristina Aleixendri is COO, chief Operating Officer, and David Ferrer is chief technology officer. My first question to Cristina was how they got their first moonshot idea to look at clean energy production and then were able to adapt it to providing clean power solutions, and still keep their initial investors enthusiastic.More details and images in Fathom.world of course!Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/aronnax. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Jan 22, 2022
25 min

Large ships working on the deep seas need new fuels. The bunker fuels they use today - what are residual fuels and refined fuels - are all hydrocarbons which the industry needs to be weaned off as they emit greenhouse gases which while being just over 2% of the global amount of man-made GHGs is likely to be much bigger a percentage as other industries and society reduce their emissions and ship numbers grow as global trade and equity increase.The politics of decarbonisation are of course difficult to move around (lobby groups tend to have loud voices) but one point that everyone agrees on is there's no time to wait.This podcast is fuel and technology agnostics, I just enjoy finding out how the ocean industries are set to sustainably evolve. The decarbonisation (or carbon emission intensity - even the phrases are not agreed on) of deep sea international shipping seems to be be working towards to LNG and then to ammonia and methanol, both capable of being produced by hydrocarbons, both being able to be produced by more renewable means. One company aiming to do that is Liquid Wind in Sweden. The company is set to start building build its first production facility to make e-methanol this year.So Craig Eason caught up with Claes Fredriksson, Liquid Wind's founder and CEO to get his story and where he thinks Liquid Wind will fit into the mix.Transcript at the following linkhttps://fathom.world/aronnax-emethanol-for-shipping-the-story-of-liquid-wind/ Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/aronnax. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Jan 16, 2022
20 min

In this episode of the Aronnax Podcast Craig Eason caught up with Diane Gilpin one of shipping's greatest champions for a resurgence of wind-powered solutions as the industry seeks energy efficiencies and decarbonisation.In a wide ranging discussion Craig and Diane talked about her career, and what she has learned about innovation and how hard it is to seek financing (an issue for any sustainability focused green technology being pioneered by a startup or SME).Craig gets her thoughts on COP 26 in Glasgow where shipping folk turned up in greater numbers than they have ever done at any previous UNFCCC meeting and what she thinks needs to happen in the future.Full transcript at https://fathom.world/aronnax-with-diane-gilpin-on-wind-life-and-financing Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/aronnax. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Nov 19, 2021
40 min
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