Advertisement

New electric tug unveiled by Crowley

Florida-based marine company Crowley has taken delivery of eWolf, the first all-electric, ship-assist harbour tugboat in the US at the Port of San Diego, beginning the transition to zero-emissions ship handling in California.

eWolf was built by Master Boat Builders in Coden, Alabama, to deliver 70 tonnes of bollard pull from a fully integrated electrical package and battery system.

This 25m tugboat is supported by a new microgrid shoreside charging station in San Diego that enables eWolf to operate at full performance daily on electricity.

“eWolf is a historic milestone in the maritime industry and Crowley’s legacy. It underscores our company’s commitment to serve as global sustainability leaders and innovators,” says chairman and chief executive Tom Crowley.

“The all-electric tugboat is the most technologically advanced vessel of its kind and will help our customers and communities reach their decarbonisation goals.”

It has a Corvus Orca energy storage system rated at 6.2 MWh, and an ABB integrated electrical propulsion package to drive two 2,050-kW Schottel RudderPropellers of type SRP 430.

Port of San Diego chairman Frank Urtasun calls eWolf a game changer. “It checks all the boxes by providing environmental, economic and operational benefits for our communities and maritime industry,” he says.

This is part of the port’s electrification initiatives “including electric cargo handling equipment with our all-electric mobile harbour cranes, our microgrid, vessel shore power, and more.”

Based on US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) data estimates, in its first 10 years of operation, eWolf will reduce NOx emissions by 178 tonnes, diesel particulate matter by 2.5 tonnes, and CO2 by 3,100 tonnes, compared with a conventionally powered tug, which would consume about 1.3M litres of marine diesel in that period.

Ships Montly - January 2024

thyssenkrupp Marine Systems and Ulstein collaborate on possible frigate contract

thyssenkrupp Marine Systems and Ulstein Verft have signed a Letter of Intent to collaborate on delivering next-generation frigates for the Royal Norwegian Navy. The...
Advertisement

Related articles

thyssenkrupp Marine Systems and Ulstein collaborate on possible frigate contract

thyssenkrupp Marine Systems and Ulstein Verft have signed a Letter of Intent to collaborate on delivering next-generation frigates...

Langh Ship takes delivery of new container vessel Ingrid

Finnish shipping company Langh Ship has recently welcomed a new addition to its fleet with the delivery of...

Viking and Fincantieri Announce Hydrogen-Powered Cruise Ship

On 8 April 2025 Viking® and Fincantieri announced Viking Libra, the world’s first hydrogen-powered cruise ship capable of...

HMS Monmouth heads to the breakers

The former Royal Naval frigate HMS Monmouth, a Type 23 Duke class vessel, recently departed Portsmouth for the...