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German group mulls remote-controlled ships

German group mulls remote-controlled ships

CREWLESS AND AUTONOMOUS A navigator for Belgian inland shipping start-up Seafar in Duisburg in western Germany monitors remote-controlled river vessels in the country, in a photo taken on March 19. AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

DUISBURG, Germany鈥擶ith the flow of new recruits into the seafaring sector drying up, a German company is exploring a potentially revolutionary measure鈥攕ending ships off without a captain on board.

HGK Shipping, based in the German port of Duisburg, is testing remote navigation from a control center on land.

Driverless vessels are 鈥渢he only solution to survive as an industry,鈥 HGK boss Steffen Bauer told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

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The average captain鈥檚 age on HGK鈥檚 350 vessels is around 55, said Bauer, whose company claims to be the leading river cargo operator in Europe.

鈥淚f we do nothing, we鈥檒l lose 30 percent of our sailors by 2030,鈥 he said.

In search of a solution, HGK has signed a partnership agreement with the Belgian start-up Seafar, a leader in the emerging field of autonomous navigation.

Founded in 2019, Seafar already operates four pilotless vessels in Belgium and has just opened an office in Germany, which represents 30 percent of Europe鈥檚 inland shipping.

Cameras, sensors

The crewless ships are guided from a control center, turning navigation from grueling work into a potentially more attractive office job.

鈥淭here is a market for remote-controlled ships,鈥 said Janis Bargsten, Seafar鈥檚 commercial director, adding that establishing a regulatory framework would take less time than perfecting the technology.

In Duisburg, Seafar and HGK have already created a center for autonomous navigation and are awaiting the approval of the German authorities to launch their first vessels.

In the initial test phase, two captains will remain on board the remotely guided ships.

The longer-term aim is to eliminate the captain鈥檚 role completely while still keeping some crew on board, Bauer said.

The technology is similar to those used in self-driving cars: the ships are fitted with sensors, cameras, radar and lidar, transmitting data in real time to the command center.

鈥淓verything is as it would be on board a ship,鈥 navigator Patrick Hertoge told AFP in Duisburg next to 10 monitors displaying the status of an autonomous barge on its way to Hamburg.

After 30 years skippering his own barge, 58-year-old Hertoge was recruited by Seafar to work on the autonomous shipping project.

Life on land

The son of two sailors, he sold his vessel and found a home on dry land for the first time in his life, he said.

鈥淥n a boat, you are on standby 24 hours a day. But here, after eight hours, I can go home,鈥 Hertoge said.

Seafar wants to start more pilot schemes in Europe and is in 鈥渁dvanced鈥 talks with the French inland waterways authority. It is also planning a test project in the Baltic Sea, Bargsten said.

Autonomous navigation could bring 鈥渟ignificant relief鈥 to an industry under pressure but would not solve 鈥渁ll problems,鈥 according to a spokesperson for the German federation of inland shipping (BDB).

Legal issues

鈥淣ew questions of responsibility鈥 require legal clarification, he said.

According to Bargsten, in the event of a technical problem, Seafar would be liable, but a human error would be chalked up to the shipping company,

And remotely navigating a vessel is still a highly demanding job that could not just be left to 鈥済amers,鈥 he said.

With years of real-life captaining under his belt, Hertoge is convinced it can work.

Much of the work of captaining a ship is the same on land as it is in a control room, he said. The only thing missing is the wind. 鈥AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE

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