alant
Well-Known Member
New environmental laws on superyachts owned by the rich and famous http://dailym.ai/1jHEGhd
I don't think many here have to worry as the spec says boats over 79ft and over 500tons, a Princess 95 weighs around 100 tons so its got to be considerably bigger than that to hit the 500t limit, the only thing I can think of that will be just over 80ft and 500t would be a serious tug boat. They need to make their minds up is it 79ft or 500 tons as you won't find many that match that requirement.
You don't believe in mission creep affecting smaller boats then.
What is the current coastal fuel situation? Our Marina has started supplying red with FAME, and is claiming 18%. LS, what is the real situation?
New environmental laws on superyachts owned by the rich and famous
Imagine being in the middle of the E Channel in a F6 and the engine management systems senses a DPF malfunction and shuts down an otherwise perfectly good engine?
This summer I guess I used 25,000 lts of diesel. .
I suspect that's somewhat above average.
Assuming a 60-70ft non displacement, using 10lt/nm, thats 2,500nm, at cruising 25kt, then 100hrs, about average for a boat that actually leaves the marina from time to time!
Agree entirely. This is the elephant in the room as far as motorboat manufacturers are concerned. In fact there are 2 elephants, one called NOx and the other called CO2. The current thrust of industrial engine emissions regulations has been to reduce NOx and that in itself is a huge problem for engine manufacturers and manufacturers of the machinery into which the engines are fitted because, as I referred to above, the amount of extra equipment that has to be bolted to each engine. Current industrial engine emissions regulations have not even begun to address the issue of reducing CO2 but effectively that means reducing fuel consumption. Reducing fuel consumption and reducing NOx whilst maintaining power and driveability is very difficult (as VW has just demonstrated).My point really was the we can be indifferent or critical of the regulations, but the real risk there ( probably more for the manufactures I suspect) is that the authorities with a green agenda simple pass legislation saying in an energy constrained / global worming / green agenda / clean energy world this scale of fuel use is no longer acceptable and should be taxed as such ( and certainly not given a tax break).
So planing boat manufacturers are either going to have to make their boats significantly more fuel efficient or develop different drive systems altogether. Don't ask me how they're going to do that
I accept that this year was a little toppy, but the point of having a boat is it moves ... if not a holiday home is a wiser investment! Regardless, mobs are not economical, they use compared to event the biggest car daft amounts of fuel and I suspect most on this forum will be fair users of there boats. My point really was the we can be indifferent or critical of the regulations, but the real risk there ( probably more for the manufactures I suspect) is that the authorities with a green agenda simple pass legislation saying in an energy constrained / global worming / green agenda / clean energy world this scale of fuel use is no longer acceptable and should be taxed as such ( and certainly not given a tax break).
Us regs to 79 feet .... pretty simple to start reducing the length and not exactly vote losing.
Well, on a boat they might as well consider using the black tank content as an additive for the SCR process....SCR is the way to go.