Marine_energy_management

Marine energy management

Marine energy management

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Marine energy management is the application of systematic methods to measure, register and analyze the energy usage of oceangoing vessels in specific.

The goal of marine energy management is to

  • maximize the (electrical or mechanical) energy generated from the minimum amount of fossil fuel, and
  • maximize the useful work obtained from the minimum amount of generated energy. The IMO is the international body responsible for code regulation.

These are two separated optimization problems.

Marine energy management can both be applied on board and onshore. It is a complex problem, due to the number of inter-related energy systems on board vessels, such as the propulsion, the auxiliary engines, refrigeration systems, HVAC, etc. The weather and sea-state, plus the logistics involved in transporting goods from one port to another, also have big effects.

Marine energy management can be addressed on board through measuring devices, monitoring systems and decision-support systems. It can be addressed onshore through data analysis, leading to change in operation on board.

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This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Marine_energy_management, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.