ontheplane
Well-Known Member
With fuel prices still climbing, and no sign of that ending, and the oil supplies being used up at a collossal rate, much talk happens about alternative fuels but boating might be a bit harder than cars...
Electric seems the cars future - be that hybrid, All electric or what to my mind is the best idea a range extender electric car.
But what fuel will boats use?
I saw an article in autocar about a Lotus that the factory had developed that would run on Methanol, ethanol, petrol, diesel or just about any other liquid that combusts!! Obviously the performance varied depending on what you burnt, but pretty much pour a bottle of scotch in the tank and it would run on it.....
This got me thinking - what's happenning in the boating world? Do we think any of the main engine providers (Read Volvo really) have any kind of plan on what's going to happen when the fuel starts to get so silly people stop boating.
I mean I am looking at a boat at the mo with a 5.8 V8 petrol in it.
Now given it will burn 7 or 8 gal an hr at cruise that's about £50 per hr - which is just about bearable - but what if that engine starts to cost £200 an hour to fuel - fantasy? I'm not so sure - I think the £2 per litre is only a year away - and who's going to bet that the £4 litre is much more than 5 years off??
I looked back at some receipts for fuel I found in some old paperwork - 8 years ago I paid £0.58p for a litre of petrol... it's now £1.30 a litre - and will be £1.50 by the end of this summer by my guess... so a threefold increase in 8 years - and the rate of increase is also getting more....
So lets say that in 5 years we'll see £4 a litre - what will a 25' V8 powered boat burning 8 gal an hr (£145 per hr) be worth? Will we be able to convert these engines to methanol or ethanol?
What's others view on how it will go?
It isn't that we can't afford it, but it's what would you rather do with your money. If a day out on the boat now costs £100-150 that's fine people will pay it - but if it costs £500 then will people go "stuff that, I can go on holiday for a week for that money" and come out of boating...?
Electric seems the cars future - be that hybrid, All electric or what to my mind is the best idea a range extender electric car.
But what fuel will boats use?
I saw an article in autocar about a Lotus that the factory had developed that would run on Methanol, ethanol, petrol, diesel or just about any other liquid that combusts!! Obviously the performance varied depending on what you burnt, but pretty much pour a bottle of scotch in the tank and it would run on it.....
This got me thinking - what's happenning in the boating world? Do we think any of the main engine providers (Read Volvo really) have any kind of plan on what's going to happen when the fuel starts to get so silly people stop boating.
I mean I am looking at a boat at the mo with a 5.8 V8 petrol in it.
Now given it will burn 7 or 8 gal an hr at cruise that's about £50 per hr - which is just about bearable - but what if that engine starts to cost £200 an hour to fuel - fantasy? I'm not so sure - I think the £2 per litre is only a year away - and who's going to bet that the £4 litre is much more than 5 years off??
I looked back at some receipts for fuel I found in some old paperwork - 8 years ago I paid £0.58p for a litre of petrol... it's now £1.30 a litre - and will be £1.50 by the end of this summer by my guess... so a threefold increase in 8 years - and the rate of increase is also getting more....
So lets say that in 5 years we'll see £4 a litre - what will a 25' V8 powered boat burning 8 gal an hr (£145 per hr) be worth? Will we be able to convert these engines to methanol or ethanol?
What's others view on how it will go?
It isn't that we can't afford it, but it's what would you rather do with your money. If a day out on the boat now costs £100-150 that's fine people will pay it - but if it costs £500 then will people go "stuff that, I can go on holiday for a week for that money" and come out of boating...?