Waterborne platooning in the short sea shipping sector

Journal Article (2020)
Author(s)

A. Colling (TU Delft - Ship Design, Production and Operations)

Robert Hekkenberg (TU Delft - Ship Design, Production and Operations)

Research Group
Ship Design, Production and Operations
Copyright
© 2020 A.P. Colling, R.G. Hekkenberg
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.trc.2020.102778
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 A.P. Colling, R.G. Hekkenberg
Research Group
Ship Design, Production and Operations
Volume number
120
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Abstract

The potential to implement the concept of waterborne platooning in the European short sea transportation system is currently being explored. In the concept, a platoon is referred to as a “Vessel Train” (VT). A VT is composed of a fully manned lead vessel and a number of follower vessels. The lead vessel takes over the navigational and situational awareness responsibilities for the follower vessels (FVs). This enables automation of the navigational tasks on these follower vessels, which in turn leads to a potential reduction in crew size and associated cost. This paper describes the economic viability of the VT concept. It is applied to a short sea case study in which a fully matured system and an early implementation stage are mimicked. The assessment shows that viability is strongly influenced by the number of crew members removed from the FVs and the departure intervals of consecutive trains. It concludes that while economically viable cases can indeed be identified, the benefits created by this VT implementation are present but not very large. This is making it questionable if a successful application of the concept can be achieved given the risk and uncertainty surrounding the individual parameters.